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SBm Jim and Kelly ^ e ^ rice °* This ^P* 1 is & centfl «v«rywhtre—Pay no mow KdsMcslnside CARTERET PRESS Carter* BwMrfi "CARTERRT, N.'".!., FRIDAY, JULY 14, 1933 PRICB THREE CENTO Board Acts To Replace Lavatories Obsolete- Equipment To Be Re- moved And Modern Sani- tary Installation To Be Made -Detailed Report For Year Read. Action to replace old, obsolete toi- |i-tu with new RaniUry ones in the C.olumbuB and Washington schools wan taken Wednpnday night *t the regular meeting of t h | Board of Ed- ucation. The decision to act came only after considerable discuRaion regarding the cost of the improve- ment. F. F. Simons, architect and engineer, was authorized to adver- tise for bids for the improvement. They are to be received and opened at a meeting to hi' held July 24. The attention of the board WHS first directed to the condition of the lavatories by Dr. H. I.. Stranding, one of the new members of the board who found the condition) while making a professional investigation. At the time he said the condition was such that no child should he rciiuir- ed to attend the schools until the condition wan remedied. An insptn tion -was made by the board a few days later and the condition ww found to be as thef physician describ- ed it, and was regarded by several members of the board as an emer- gency that must be attended to at once. A letter was read at the meeting Wednesday night from County Su- perintendent m. I*. Tiiiwtry m which he authorised the board to transfer ?2,3<J5.B7 from the land and build ing account to the repairs and re- placement account. It will be used to- pay part of the cost of repairing the lavatories. A long list of other needed re- pairs was presented by Commissioner Isidore Schwartz chairman of the repair and supply committee. Some of these will be postponed for a time on account of the urgent need of the lavatory repairs which are to be com- pleted before school opens in Sep- tember. The feature of the meeting Wed- nesday night was the annual report of MIHK B. V. Hetmann, supervining l f th Bright Eyes Group Installs Officers Mrs. Edward Strack Is. New Pocahontas Of Council Here Firemen mr. and Mrs. Ruddy Ent«rtain Members Of Joily 12 Club Mr. nnd Mrs. Walter Ruddy were hosts last night to the members of the Jolly Twelfe Social Cluh. The members played bunco and a dinner' Usual Water Ceremony Mark* Initiate Four —Many tion. Visitor* At Func- Officers were installed Monday night at a largely attended meeting of Bright Ryes Council No. 39, Daughters of pncahontiia, in Fire- house No. 1. There were delegations present from Mohnkon, Union flity, Perth Amboy, New Brunswick and other places, and among the visitors were high officials of the order. <ireat Pocahontas, Mrs. Carrie Schmid, of Union City, conducted the installation assisted by District Deputy Mrs. Ella Wolffe, Great (luard of the Tepee Mrs. A. MeNa- mara and others, After the installation there was a social session and refreshments were served. The officers installed are: Poca- hontas, Mrs. Edward Strack; Wino- na Mrs. Matilda Htte; Powhnttan, Adeline Donovan; prophetess, Mrs. Gus Freeman; guard of the tepee, Flossie Mann; guard of the forest, Mrs. Valentine Gleckner; first scout, Mrs. Elsie King; second scout, Mrs. Daniel Reason; first worrinr, MrJ Elizabeth Kathe; second warrior, Mrs. Verona Sehrociler; third war- rior, Mrs. William Ilapp; fourth war rior, Mrs. Harry Yetman; first run- ner, Mrs. .1. Ettgert lirown; second runner, Mrs. Harry Axon; first coun- Bflnr, Mrs. Mary Donovan; second muii.it lui, Mrn, William Morpia. principal of the schools, for the school year junt dosed. It contained a fund of varied and highly inter- esting information concerning the schools. The rtrpoit was prepared HO as to give a survey of the develop ment of the past five years. It con- tained more than fifty pages of close- ly written typed matter. It was shown that in five years there has been a decided increase in the enroll- ment in the high school and upper grammar grades, and an equally not able decrease in enrollment in the lower grades. One of the problems presented to the board in this situation is the fact that while there is more than enough school furniture for small pupils, there is ft. shortage of desk* and Other needs for older, larger pupils. More typewriters will be needed in high school in September; more desks, more books for the high school classes and upper grammar grade •Pupils will be needed, But there will \e plenty on hand for the youngsters Jn the primary grades and lower Vrammar grades. ^Attention is directed to the fact that the present high school library is too small, as only fourteen stu- dentM have space to occupy the room at onetime. The county superintund- > ent has suggested, Miss Hermann said, that the wall be broken through between the present library and the Talented Carteret Children To Be Heard Wednesday Wesley and Audrey Catri, the talented children of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Catri, of 71 Larch street, will be heard over Station WOR Wednesday night from 10:30 to IV o'clock. Wesley, the older of the two is 9 and is well known to radio aud- iences for his rare ability as, a danc- er. Within the last year or more he has added singing to his accomplish- ments. Audrey, although much younger, is revealing talent both as n singer »nd dancer nnd is keeping Wesley busy looking after his laurels Both children have appeared many timeR on the stage of theatres in New York and Jersey City. was served. Besidtfa Mr. and Mrs. Ruddy the other members present were: Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Dono- ghue, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Orevmel, Mr. and Mrs. •William Schneider, Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Miller, and the Misses .lulia Kashel and Hettie .Tcfferys. Tennis Tournament Deadline Tomorrow Entries Close Tomorrow For I' Net Tourney Conducted Here By CARTERET PRESS Event — Fun For Public Looting On From Safe Dis- tance Chicken Dinner Served. Report* Of Work Received At Health Board Meeting Routine business was transacted last night at a short mating of the Board of Health, Reports werp re- ceived on work that i<< bring done in Cutting rag weed, spraying trees and cleaning ditches. The health board nurse, Mrs. J. Bodnar report- ed several eas«s of whooping coupi in the borough being cared for and 144 children being given immuniza- tion treatment against diphtheria. The deadline for entries tennis tournament conducted in' the by the k Nut Club Meets Pastry Next Week Victory Will Give Shanley-Bell Clan Third Straight In Sec- ond Half Race. The Cardinals and the Maeka, tied for second place League, will bittfls •Twilight Tues- loom used for meetings by the board, , and that the two rooms be used. I .Members of the board discussed the dviiability of meeting in Borough !all or in. one of the other schools. Of interest to parents of Carteret list of higher institutions of ...ing where graduates of the lo- "high school are now studying or ~ studied since graduating here. list includes Harvard, Columbia, Rutgers and many other nationally lenown American colleges besides a few in Europe. Miss Hermann point- ed out that admission to these col- leges shows that Carteret high school as a thoroughly approved and ac- credited high school, on a par with any in. the land. Commissioner Mittuch wanted to know if the pupils were required, to attend some preliminary school be- fore entering the colleges hMed. Miss Hermann said that certain of thane colleges have such requirements but that they are required of pupils from any high school in the country; the requirement betnt an arbitrary one of the college ami in no sense a re- flection upon the high .school attend- ed by the pupil. Regarding the commercial depart- ment the supervising principal pre. seated statistics showing thut forty- four per cent of the graduates of the Commercial Departnieiif of high school are employed which is an ex- ceptionally high percentage at this time of economic depression. Discussing special subjects Miss Hermann said sho believes in Hoy Scouts, school oi'tthitetru, school jbuiubi and Other school clubs. She declared in favor of hobbies in and out ol school to give interest and direction to the activities of pupils out of school hour*. The pupils spend eight hours in school, sleep eight hours and have eight hours free. The school, she said, endeavors as fur as possibl t id fitable topics day evening at the high school field. On Thursday of next week the Nut Club, holding first place in the sec- ond half struggle, will endeavor to increase its lead when it meets the Pastry Hoys, who so far this half have failed to win a game. A glance at the standing in the second half race reveals the teams lined up m exactly the reverse ol- der from that, they held the first half. The Nut Club which wound up in the cellar in the initial .semester is in first place. The Curtis who finished third are tied with the Macks for second place and the Pastry Boys, winners in the first half, are resting peacefully in last place. CARTERET PRESS during the week starting July 24 closes tomorrow night. Letters postmarked later than tomorrow will not be accepted. So far the response of the tennis players in this horou-gh has not been very encouraging. Those enUved in the singles are: Phil Chodoah, I*wrence Ruhel, Mi- chael Razaral, /irthur Schonwpid, John Sidnn, Sol Price, Maurice Cho- dosh, .lake Chodosh, Andrew Hila, Tom Richards, John Goyena. Those entered in the doubles are: Phil Chodosh, i^awrence Rubel; John Goyena, Michael Bnzaral; Maurice Chodosh, Jake Chodosh; Sol Price, Norman (lodei-sUul. Felix Shay To Spend Vacation In Sewaren First White Man To Travel From Cairo To Capetown Will Visit Sister, Mrs. Madge Murphy. Felix Shay, the first white man to travel the dangerous overland route fiom Caiio to Capetown, renowned globe-trotter, author, and intimate friend of the great Albert Hiibhard; will spend the month of August with his sister, Mrs. Madtfe Murphy, of Sewaren. Mr. 3hay ia the author of "filbert Hubbard of East Aurora", a book devoted to the life and work of his friend and "From Capetown to Cairo Overland", which is a record of his African expeiiencea. For many years Mr. Shay has been on the staff of the National Cleo graphic magazine, and, upon the com- pletion of his adventurous African journey, that magazine devoted an entire U»ue to hia trip. lie was editor of the Roycroft publications in East Aurora, N. Y., and proved himself an aWc nweewwtr -to hip friend, MV. Hubbard, who once said of him, "Ha knows me a little better than any living man." Mr. Shay tins traveled about the world for many years, seeking ad- vonture iff out-of-the-way places, and telling of his thrilling experiences during 1 countless lecture tours, the first of which was a tour of the Brit- ish Isles and the Continent in 1912. Since then he has addressed large and interested audiences in all tho principal cities of the United States. was plenty of fun and not TTtTft excitement last night when initiation ceremonies were hold for four new members of Fire Company No. 1. The initiation ceremonies of this company have 'become a tradi- tion that dates hack to the start of the borough or earlier. It is usually a summer ceremony because a good deal of water is used. The new mem- bers receive a thorough ducking in a special tank and the firemen dm piny a liberality 1 , that extends to sun Iry nKhers who receive a pail of wu ter from second story windows or the roof of the firehouw as they en- ter tho building. At a safe distance a large gather- ing of spectators enjoy the fun. The four initiated last night were: Her- bert (Curley) Sullivan, Charles Crnne, Charles Rapp and Theodore Falconer. After the water initiation there was a chicken dinner served in the dining r«">m on the wcoru) floor. AH members of tho company, many vis- itors and officials were present. Councilman Charles A. Conrad and Edward Dolan were among the guests last night and spoke as did several others present. C. C. ShorU dfin was the toastmaster. A Communication Dear Kditor: I meet Scrogjjins and bis fool cross eyed cat the other day and, honest, it takes me n«ar half a hour to stop laughinfr at 'em and start asking questions. You sec, Mr. Edi- tor, I've seen that there oat with all kinds of rigs but this one has the others barked off the stage. Its a kind of red turban or something on top of the cat's heed so you don't see no ears or nothin and it's all ed. Then on the front they's a little brass knife only it':, big itt the nmnll :nd if you get what I mean. Well, Sir when I get so I can talk 1 shoot some questions at old Scrog- gins like this: "What's the red sig- ROMAN MICKLA Funeral service was held Mondaj for Roman Mickla of 118 iSharot street who died ut the age of (SO Friday in the Perth Amboy General Hospital. Mr. Miekla was a resident of Carteret for the past thirty years. He had been ill a long time preced- ing his death. Surviving are: a. wi- dow Susan, und two sons, Peter and Roman all of Carteret. The funeral service was held in St. Elius Gre«J< GttUwliv Church. In- terment was in the Greek Catholic, cemetery in Perth Amboy. nal on the cat's head? "That there," says Scrofpgins, "Is a fez". And what the devil is a fez " I comes back. "A fea", says Scroggins, "is a turk's hat." "Why put it on the kitty " I asks. "because that foi>l cat is a Turk," says Scroggins. "I fixed that cat up with some nice fish heads and other cat delicacies and the old fool car- Chrome Couple Wed In Ukrainian Church Miis EVA Bober and SJtaadey Kondas United Wednesday Evening—Will Live In Mer- cer Street. MIM Evai Bober, daughter of Mrs. Thecla, of 52 Essex street, and Stan- ley Kondas, non of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kondaa, of \\ Mercer street, were married Wednesday eve- ning at 7 :30 o'clock in St. Demetrius Ukrainian Catholic Church by Rev. Father John Hundiak, the pastor. The bridesmaid was MiflR Stella Kon- das, & siRter of the hridegroom and the heat man was John Smith. The. bi ide woie ft riMtumc of bin" chiffon and hat anil slippers to match, she carried tea roaest. Miss Kondas wore a white ensemble with hat and slippers to match and rar- rifld pink roses, Mr. and Mrs. Kondas will reside nt 17 Mercer street. The bridegroom in rwplny«d »t th» plant of yjf II, M. Metals Refining Company. Fr. Galassi Honored By His Parishioners At Farewell Party In Port Reading Last Night—Priest Who Spent Many Years In This Section Must Leave To Regain. Health Prominent Speakers. PORT READING -• Reverend Co- lumbine Galassi, who established St. Anthony's church in Porl. Heading twenty4wo< years ago and has served the people of his jmiifh faithfully and well since that time, was given a farewell party last night in his Port Reading church. Father Galassi has been forced to leave his parishes here and in Perth Amboy, where ho was pastor of Our Lady of the Most Holy Kosary church,, until he can re gain his health. The party was arranged by Joseph Refrigerator Blamed For Restaurant Alaze Brotkwrs Lunch in Rooaevelt Avonu* Gutted By Early Morning Fire Smok« and Water Damage Places Near- by. Fire which w*« attributed to a short circuit in an electrical r?frig erator was discovered yesterday about 3 a. m. in the Brothers I,unrh, a restaurant at 82 Roosev«lt awnno in thp Chrome section. The fire had gained a good deal of headway when the Pre department arrived in an- swer to an alarm from Box 32. Flams* hud eaten their way in nil directions from the refrigerator and the entire place was badly gutted be- fore thf> firemen got it under control. It was nn hour before It wa<i out. Damage is estimated at anywhere from $2,000 to $3,000 an d may be much more. The notisp belongn to Philip Krinzman, a Chrome grocer, firemen said. The proprietor of the restaurant is John Sguras. Besides the damage to the restau- rant, smoke and wiiter damaged , gd hat cleaning place nnd a barbershop adjoining. Semi-Pro Base Ball Here Next Friday Carteret All Stars To Inaugu- rate Weekly Attraction At High School Field By Meet- ing Harrisburg Colored Giants. Semi-pro twilight league baseball will be inaugurated in this borough next Friday evening at the high school field when the Ciirteret All Stars, composed entirely of Carter- •t ball players, meet th*> Harrisburtr 'oloral Giants, one of the leading olored iiggregntiotis in central Jer- sey, in th« first of a serieu of Fri- d ih lies it off and leave* trie whole lot with A bunch of- strange cats he ftipt never «U$••'.bgtaw.'i- ••+.. "Say, says I "that reminds me Q{ something. I heard that a local poli- tician went to a picnic in East Rail- way Sunday and spent five bucks be- fore he woke up and found he didn't know on« guy at that picnic and none of them live where they can vote for him." Maybe that guy was a Turk, too," says Scroggins. HUCKl.KHE-RRY HESS. Checks Here Soon For Families Of Corps Members Bids for school supplies) were re- ceived from J. L. Haiiimett Company of Newark, $1,(>00, und Pecknian, Little. & Co., of New York, $l,(5<i7- ,1'i for supplies for the schools. The llammett Company was awarded the contract, being the lowest bidder. A letter was received from the State Federation of District Hoards of Education outlining valuable work iluiu: by the league in opposing legis- lation harmful to the interests of the public schools und furthering favur- iihle legislation. The annual re.purl of the district clerk was received and filed after a few uf Hie high spots were explain- ed. A from coiifiiHiiiieutioii was r«c« Wed Community Bible School To Close Tonight; Program The Community Summer Bible school will close tonight with a "Trip Through The Bible To Find the Way of Life". The program will bo &c' v ~ en in the Sunday school room of the Presbyterian church beginning at 7:45. All are cordially invited to at- tend. The picnic for the members of the school will be huld tomorrow af- ternoon. Thu pupils will be taken to Waranoco Park by bus. The bus will leave the Presbyterian church at 1:00 o'clock and stop at the St. Murk's Kpiseopal church, leaving there at l:lf>. There has been keen competition for the highest number of points during the last week. Har- old Edwards has held the. first place all week, hut the standing of the next three or four have changed nearly every day. At the close of the Thursday session. Jack Humphries stood second, Fred Johnson third and Wilton Stewart fourth, with only about ten points between them. Hebrew Ladies Combine On Big Picnic Plan The combined Hebrew Ladies of the borough including all' gTOupa. were, represented ut u meeting held Monday night in the synagogue of the Brotherhood of Israel when plans were made for a picnic to be held Walsh, Emergency was advised today C Mr. Edward Relief Director y that the checks for the Civilian Con- servation Corps will be received be* tween July 12, and July 20. Hereaf- ter the subsequent, checks will be re- ceived before the 8th of each month. The delay was caused by the boys being in Idaho. Mr. Walsh also re- ports that in the Ifcst month and a half there has been a decrease of H!> cases due to. men finding employ- ment and through investigation, There ure now ;((J1 cases against the former peak of 450. Personals The Children of Mary of the Sac- red Heart Roman Catholic Church will hold an outing tomorrow ut Lake Hopatcong. L. Gill, who acted as toastmaster The first speaker of the evening wa Mayor William A-. Ryan, of wood- •btiflge, who etpi'es&ed the nope that was felt by all that Father G-alass would soon be restored to health nnd he able to come hack among then once more. Rev. Edward Cahill, pas tor of St. Mary's church in Perth Amboy, expressed sincere love am affection for Father Ualassi. Shor speeches were also made by Rev. Paul Fairbrother, of Perth Amboy; Rev. Hickey, successor to Father Ca- Inssi; Jacob Ornusam, Henry St. (Hair Lavin, William Brown, super ititendent of the Reading coal docks, James E. Filer, of tho Hoard of Kd- ucation, and Robert L. Satller. Some of the speakers told of the work that had been accomplished by Fatluv Calassi in the spiritual field, others spoke of the civic improvements, yet in all of them was the sincere ex- resaion of love for a priest, cki/.en nil neighbor. In reply, Father Galassi thanked is parish fur this display of lovu nd affection und ulso expressed hia ogret upon leaving the people who .vere so dear to him and had je'ven liin such valuable assistance and en- ouragement in the past. A sum of money was presented to •"ather Galassi as a token of appre- iation from his parish. A vocal se- lection was given by Mr. Hates, ac- companied by Mrs. Eslelle Christo- pher. Music was furnished by Joseph ^allahan's orchestra 1 from Perth Ani- soy. Refreshments were served. day night games to be promoted by Curley Sullivan. Sullivan announced last, night thut has secured the use of the high school field for Friday nisbt base- all, lie sfiiil he hopes to continue with this new venture as, lontf as he has the support of Carteret fans. He will us* 1 Carteret. players only. His pitching selwlimi will pmliubly be Stanley Kosel, big righthander, who has been showing class all sea- son, Mickey D'zurilln will be on the receiving end. Hie infield will be composed of Dinney Combo, Mickey Miglecz, Sam Smolensk! and Frank Yap. The outfield will be covered by Lukusiak, Kara and Heaa Sullivan. The game will st"rt promptly at fi'.lS o'clock with a capable umpin on hand. Schedule Planned For Boplmrd Fot Delegation and Council Agr»« On Schedule, Up To Public Service To Approve It. A delejration of twelve resident* of the Boulevard action attended a meeting of the borough council Mon- day njjfht to help work out a sched- ule of bun service to meet the n*ed« of that section. The Boutfvard has heen more or leiw isolnted *inc« tho Kmtllne trolley system wan discon- tinued. A r«-pr*9«nUtive of the Pub- lic Starrier! Coordinated Transport was there, too, Charlen Callnnan. Protest h»d been made by the resi- dents of the Boulevard o**r thtir lack of traveling facilities, »nd they had petitioned the council for relief. The »djourned meeting* of the coun- cil Monday nifrht was the result. There w»s much dincusnion. before a ichndulp for weekdays was agreed upon. The Moulevard residents want- ed to be reasonable and did not de- mand that buse« make trips back and I forth at hour* when there would be little or nojpatronage. The seheifule worked out for w««l( days w»s approved hy resolution of council and submitted for further »pprov»l by the Public Service Com- pany. It is as follows: forenoon — l> :3ft, "!:!>&, 9:55, and 11:25; after- noon—1.56, 3:&B, i.:lo, fi-55, 10-25 and last niijht trip 12:45 a m. In working out » schedule for Sun- days, the time of beginninit and clou- inut services in the various churches in the borough wna carefully con- sidered. The following schedule wts d upon an being satisfactory to *hu Bn()UvBr<l rtaidentx; torenoon —7:2ft, 8:55, 9:55; afternoon — I8:2r> P. M., 1:56, S:M, 0:55,. 10:25 and last trip at, night 12:15. A. M. If this schedule is approved by th* Public Service Company copies of it will be printed and distributed iming the Boulevard residents. Councilman Philip Turk called at- ention to the condition of the two wlice cars, a Ford that is out of ommission and a Paifre that needs nuch repair. The chairman of the police committee was authorised to negotiate for a new car in the low Mrs. John Hemse.1, of Washington avenue who has been ill for several weeks was taken to the Rahway Me- morial Hospital yesterday where she underwent an operation this morn- ing. The weekly card party in St. Jos- eph's Church hall tonight will be in charge of a committee including; Mrs. George Lackey, Miss Anna Nar- di, Mrs. John Auitn and Miss Zita Mellon. possible to provide profitable topics for thought and interest during th« free hours. The supervising princi- pal also spoke of the refining in- fluence of such special aubjocta as music,' art and literature. Cotumi&gioner Mittuch said he was delighted to hear an intelligent ex- planation of the valuable uses of the special subjects in view of the vicious attacks that were mad* recently up- on such subjects by "the very special interests" that attempt to dictate the './ affairs of the borough. These inter* eats, Hi. Mlttuoh said, were actuated only by their own greed for money and hopes to have the special a\4b- juctti tsKen off the* course in order to uave a few dollars in taxes. He de- lated that the scljOol children of ' are as much entitled to a education as children in any other Unvn in the country. Dr. H. h- Straudbeig said, the spe- cial subject* haxa *. high cultural value. ... ,<• Several questions vere asked by members conewnujw the re- Each meiub«r ifm wippUwi a, c o p y . - •••• ••,.;•••, ' fiom the Carteret All Stars ball team requesting the uae of the high school field for twilight games. The request was granted on the condition thut the games of this group do not interfere with other athletic events. A request of Meyer Rosenblum, sports editor of the Carteret Press Cor use of the school tennis courts for a tourney was referred to the athletic committee. Miss Olive Gunderaon waa up- pointtd teacher i>£ Domestic Science to take tho place of Miss Mury Hoo- lihau, resigned. A list of eighteen non resident applicants for teaching jobs, was presented by the teaehere committee Eh tho liflt WA» notifie p Each y the teaeh on tho liflt WA» notified i t Eac that preference would be given Cttj th in making appoi that preferne g to Cttrterctj teachers in making appoint- ments. Tho committee on transportation reported that owing to the adoption of a nix months budget the commit- tee has a gap of four months begin- ning in September when there ia no contract for transportation and no money immediately avuikble to raai* the cost. The committee was iiuthorUttd to confer with tne car- rier* nnd try to extend the contracts to «OW the period. The result will he reported to the board at the next were made fo a p Sunday, August 13, on Anderson's farm in Shady Brook road, Bonham- town. The admission charge will be 20 cents. Dancing will be free. Mrs. Isadora Brown is general chairman in charge. Transportation will he in charge of Mrs. James Brown and Mrs. Lao K. Hrown thru whom reservations are to b« made. Announcements will be made later regarding the mode of transporta- tion and leaving time. The affair is planned to be. one of the biggest out- door events of the season. Club and Congregation To Plan For Picnic The German-American Citizens' Club met last nitfhl in the Lutheran hall and made arrangements for a iuint meeting of tlie club and the congij*«ati(m ot Oho German Lu- theran Church to be held Monday ih i h h l l f r the pur night in the f l y hull for the pur- ii b Wtinic i July 24 adjourned to msec meeting. again cm July"24 when the bids fo* replacement of lavatories will be re- oeived a»d. opened. AH the members of th,* liody were present at th? mfirttif: •• \ : pose of planning a picnic to be spon- sored by the two organisations. Firemen Hear Report*; Exemption For Kennedy A regular meeting of Piie Com- pany No. 2 was held iu the fir*)hou»0 Monday night when reports were, re- wivnd on tlje recent dance ana ewd imrty. A certificate of sx&uptioa was iwnlwi to Joeeph Keiuwdy who has »erv«d Ma full m«m. ye*rs a* a Mr. and Mia. John Famill, of jlenn Cove, L. I., have been visit- ng Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kinnelly. Randolph Street Man Denies Hitting Chinaman Charles Dumondor Dumont, aged 24 of Randolph street, was arraign- ed in police court last night on com plaint of Sam Wah, a Chinese laun dry man of the hill section who said Dumont struck him. Dumont denied the charge. There wew no witnesses and the case wits dismissed. Mother-Teachers Outing At Asbury Park Thursday An outinir to Asbury Park will b held Thursday under the auspices ol the Mother-Teacher Association of the Presbyterian Sunday school. The trip will be made in a large charter ed bus which will leave Riyrp's audi- torium at IU a. in. and will leave the Presbyterian church at 10.15. Americana Meet Woodbridge Colored Giants Here Sunday The. Americans, victorious in theif kbt two games, will play tk& Wood- bridge Colored Giants at ;>rice range. Some resolutions re- pecting finance were adopted. Twi League Votes To Return Entrance Fees Board Of Director* Holds Promise To Refund Entrance Fees To Team*. Foresters To Resume Initiation Fees For Members At a meeting of Court Carteret No. 48 Foresters of America Tues- day night in Odd Follows hall an- nouncuniuut was mad« thut the reg- ular initiation fees will be resumed ill all muses of new members joining the organization. The fees wera dropped for tho period of a member- ship drive. \) report was presented by the auditing committee upon a t di f th bk f th y recent audit ourt. Other g of th routine p books of the business was cou. Oh discussed. TV meeting wua well at- tended. bg o ty fteld next Sunday afternoon. Corky Andres will t*ke the mound for the local*. Jr. C. E. Closes Season With Social In S. S. Room The Junior Christian Endeavor held a social Saturday afternoon iu the Sunday school room of the Prus- byterlan church. Games were played and refreshments wer* served. Irene Hemael received a Bible from Christian Endeavor for a iec ord of no tardiness e.r absence from meetings. Those present were: Irene Hem- 8el, Emma LorenU, Huth Houry, Faith Wilgus, Erika Wulf, Stephen Mucha, Jameu Kiddle, Cladys O'Do|i- nedd and Mrs. Cornelius Doody. Mrs. Tobias Garter I* Hostess At Bridge Mrs. Tobias Curlier of Lowell street entertained last night iu. her home at bridge. Among the guests were: Mrs. Alex LeBow, Mrs. J. Welw, Mii8 Clara Stern, Mrs. Julius Klow, Mr*. Bernard Kahili Mrs. Mor- ris S|?ew»k, Mrs. Morris Ulman. MM. BmanueJ Ufkowik and Mra. D. Lasner. International Track Meet At Palmer Stad. Brilliant Performances Antici- pated At Meet In Princeton Tomorrow Afternoon—Stars Of Note To Run. PRINCETON, N. J., July 14 — Brilliant performances ure anticipat ed at the international track mee between combined teams of Oxfori and Cambridge Universities, of Eng land, and of Princeton and Cornell Universities, of this country, which will be held in Palmer Stadium, Princeton, <beKi n m n K at 4:30 on Sat unlay afternoon, July 15th. Meel records are expected to fall wher two intercollegiate champions an three former intercollegiate, champ- ions vie with one another and with other Kritish and American stars. Some of the luces are expected to be but little short of Olympic (lames' calibre. The atmosphere which ac- companies international competition will be heightened by the method of conducting the meet. Only first places will count iu the team scorj and, ut the conclusion of each event, a bugle will; be sounded and the flajj uf the country winning it will be hoisted on a flag-pole. One event at a time will be run off and, in the case of the field events, the individ- ual competitor and the result of his effort will be announced as the trials proceed. Princeton'* Grawt Star to Hun The. foreimmt runner of either team is William It. Bontbrun, uf Princeton, who was one of the sen sations of the spring season und who has been recognized hy tr»i:k expert* as being the equal of the great John Paul Jones. Uonthron is intercolW giate. champion in the KUO and 1,500- meter runs, and accomplished the al- mont unprecedented feat of scoring first places in these two events ana in thu 3,000-meter run, as well, ii the Yale-Princeton track meet ii May. Each team is excedingly well bftl anced. The British team, its sea-legs worn otf in the Yale-Harvard meet Holding its promise, the board of directors of the Carteret Twilljjftt ague at a regular meeting in Phil Turk's Roosevelt Diner Monday night voted to return entrance few to all four teams in the league. Ed- ward Skeffington, manager of the Pastry Hoys, submitted his entrance fee. All outstanding bills were paid. Upon a request by Kd Mack, nmn- a^'i'r of the Macks, to use two addi- tional players who were not on his player list, the board voted to give liim conditional permission to use them for the present.. The players are, Hob Richey and Joe Terebecki. The board decided to retuA the hiiliuice uf the buKelmlls on hand if they were, found to be unuati9fac- A plea was made by the board for better attendance and cooperation OIL the part of the citizens of tho borough in supporting the league mul helping to put it over. It was pointed out that the league wa3 formed for the interest of the base- lull fans of the borough and it should be up to them to support and maintain it. INSTATES Tha Daughter of An>erl# met last night ana installed officer*, w Fellows ball. St. Joseph's Juniors Win 13th Straight Game The St. Joseph's Juniors won their thirteenth straight game this week, defeating Waslyk's All Stars by a 10 u 1 score. . The batteries: St. Joseph's, Pat- ick and Suniutka. All Stars, Waslyk, J. Pado, and .'aryo. The McKinley Ramblers scored two one-sided victories this week, de- feating the Majestic A. C, 15 to 2, and the Junior Aces, 12 to 1. The score by innings: Ramblers 212 160 010—12 Juniors 010 000 000— 1 The score by innings: Ramblers 1530 001 5—1& Majesties 000 020 0— 2 The Misses Miles Return From Stay In Virginia Tin* Misses Natalie and Kempe Miles, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Miles of 57 Atlantic street, returned homo after a stay of weeks at Roanoke, Va. Miss (it Saturday and bolstered by Ai W y rive former American stars, may pos albly f()>•«<! again into the lead in tht international series which fS" now even, England having won iu lt)2[ and 1926 and thu Americans in 1929 and 11)30. The first meet, in 1921, resulted in a tie. lutvi: ftktin Natalie ed fro Milua rec m PTTO'S I R , recently was graduat- ' Institute where she l ed fr P completed a course in fashion illus- trating. T6 U5T---Tbrea room flat vfith bath and itl taipro*«meptc, Nece lo. carton; rsaionable reiU. Inquire J. Muehi, 108 Luwttll street, Carteret. Druids Picnic To Be Held Sunday At Oak Ridge A picnic will be held Sunday at Oak Ridge under the auaipices of Middlesex Grove No. VA Ancient, United Order of Druids. The trip will be made in buses that will le*ve Curteret at 8 a. m. On the commit- tee in charge are: Anthony UUers- berger, Adolph Nerinjc and John Horn. Lady Druid* To Hold Meeting—Card Party Moo. A card party wd meeting will be held Monday night next under the auspice* of tho Lady Dvuid* in, 9ir«- houae No. 1. The .comjaitte* on ar- PRESGYTERIAN NOTES "Conserving One's Powers" will be the theme of the aennon at the Presbyterian Church on Sunday morning. Thts trustees will hold it meeting oa Friday evening at the home of Dr. H. L. Strainlbergtt 0:30. On Thursday, July 20th, thu mem- bers of tne Mother Teacher Associa- tion will jo to Asbury Park for a day's outiiig. They will make the trip iu "Miss Carteret" and plan to leave the church about 10:00 o'clock. Leather Is Going Up Have Your Shoes Repaired NOW At Old Prices FRITZ GALLE Quick Sko« Rtf*iri Att.ntioc To L«dio«' Dy«d A»y Color All Work Gmurantwd Schuck and Mr* MatUat JSei&el,

Thi «v«rywhtre—Pay no mow KdsMcslnside CARTERE Carter ... · SBm Jim and Kelly ^e ^rice °* Thi ^P*s 1 is & centfl «v«rywhtre—Pay no mow KdsMcslnside CARTERECarter* BwMrfi

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Page 1: Thi «v«rywhtre—Pay no mow KdsMcslnside CARTERE Carter ... · SBm Jim and Kelly ^e ^rice °* Thi ^P*s 1 is & centfl «v«rywhtre—Pay no mow KdsMcslnside CARTERECarter* BwMrfi

SBm Jim and Kelly ^ e ^rice °* This ^ P * 1 i s & centfl «v«rywhtre—Pay no mow

KdsMcslnside CARTERET PRESS Carter* BwMrfi"CARTERRT, N.'".!., FRIDAY, JULY 14, 1933 PRICB THREE CENTO

Board Acts ToReplace Lavatories

Obsolete- Equipment To Be Re-moved And Modern Sani-tary Installation To Be Made-Detailed Report For Year

Read.

Action to replace old, obsolete toi-|i-tu with new RaniUry ones in theC.olumbuB and Washington schoolswan taken Wednpnday night *t theregular meeting of t h | Board of Ed-ucation. The decision to act cameonly after considerable discuRaionregarding the cost of the improve-ment. F. F. Simons, architect andengineer, was authorized to adver-tise for bids for the improvement.They are to be received and openedat a meeting to hi' held July 24.

The attention of the board WHSfirst directed to the condition of thelavatories by Dr. H. I.. Stranding,one of the new members of theboard who found the condition) whilemaking a professional investigation.At the time he said the condition wassuch that no child should he rciiuir-ed to attend the schools until thecondition wan remedied. An insptn •tion -was made by the board a fewdays later and the condition wwfound to be as thef physician describ-ed it, and was regarded by severalmembers of the board as an emer-gency that must be attended to atonce.

A letter was read at the meetingWednesday night from County Su-perintendent m. I*. Tiiiwtry m whichhe authorised the board to transfer?2,3<J5.B7 from the land and building account to the repairs and re-placement account. It will be usedto- pay part of the cost of repairingthe lavatories.

A long list of other needed re-pairs was presented by CommissionerIsidore Schwartz chairman of therepair and supply committee. Someof these will be postponed for a timeon account of the urgent need of thelavatory repairs which are to be com-pleted before school opens in Sep-tember.

The feature of the meeting Wed-nesday night was the annual reportof MIHK B. V. Hetmann, supervining

l f th

Bright Eyes GroupInstalls Officers

Mrs. Edward Strack Is. NewPocahontas Of Council Here

Firemenmr. and Mrs. Ruddy Ent«rtainMembers Of Joily 12 Club

Mr. nnd Mrs. Walter Ruddy werehosts last night to the members ofthe Jolly Twelfe Social Cluh. Themembers played bunco and a dinner' Usual Water Ceremony Mark*

Initiate Four

—Manytion.

Visitor* At Func-

Officers were installed Mondaynight at a largely attended meetingof Bright Ryes Council No. 39,Daughters of pncahontiia, in Fire-house No. 1. There were delegationspresent from Mohnkon, Union flity,Perth Amboy, New Brunswick andother places, and among the visitorswere high officials of the order.

<ireat Pocahontas, Mrs. CarrieSchmid, of Union City, conductedthe installation assisted by DistrictDeputy Mrs. Ella Wolffe, Great(luard of the Tepee Mrs. A. MeNa-mara and others,

After the installation there was asocial session and refreshments wereserved.

The officers installed are: Poca-hontas, Mrs. Edward Strack; Wino-na Mrs. Matilda Htte; Powhnttan,Adeline Donovan; prophetess, Mrs.Gus Freeman; guard of the tepee,Flossie Mann; guard of the forest,Mrs. Valentine Gleckner; first scout,Mrs. Elsie King; second scout, Mrs.Daniel Reason; first worrinr, MrJElizabeth Kathe; second warrior,Mrs. Verona Sehrociler; third war-rior, Mrs. William Ilapp; fourth warrior, Mrs. Harry Yetman; first run-ner, Mrs. .1. Ettgert lirown; secondrunner, Mrs. Harry Axon; first coun-Bflnr, Mrs. Mary Donovan; secondmuii.it lui, Mrn, William Morpia.

principal of the schools, for theschool year junt dosed. It containeda fund of varied and highly inter-esting information concerning theschools. The rtrpoit was prepared HOas to give a survey of the development of the past five years. It con-tained more than fifty pages of close-ly written typed matter. It wasshown that in five years there hasbeen a decided increase in the enroll-ment in the high school and uppergrammar grades, and an equally notable decrease in enrollment in thelower grades.

One of the problems presented tothe board in this situation is the factthat while there is more than enoughschool furniture for small pupils,there is ft. shortage of desk* andOther needs for older, larger pupils.More typewriters will be needed inhigh school in September; moredesks, more books for the high schoolclasses and upper grammar grade

•Pupils will be needed, But there will\e plenty on hand for the youngstersJ n the primary grades and lowerVrammar grades.^Attention is directed to the factthat the present high school libraryis too small, as only fourteen stu-dentM have space to occupy the roomat onetime. The county superintund-

> ent has suggested, Miss Hermannsaid, that the wall be broken throughbetween the present library and the

Talented Carteret ChildrenTo Be Heard Wednesday

Wesley and Audrey Catri, thetalented children of Mr. and Mrs.Leonard Catri, of 71 Larch street,will be heard over Station WORWednesday night from 10:30 to IVo'clock. Wesley, the older of the twois 9 and is well known to radio aud-iences for his rare ability as, a danc-er. Within the last year or more hehas added singing to his accomplish-ments. Audrey, although muchyounger, is revealing talent both asn singer »nd dancer nnd is keepingWesley busy looking after his laurelsBoth children have appeared manytimeR on the stage of theatres inNew York and Jersey City.

was served. Besidtfa Mr. and Mrs.Ruddy the other members presentwere: Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Dono-ghue, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Orevmel,Mr. and Mrs. •William Schneider, Mr.and Mrs. Ivan Miller, and the Misses.lulia Kashel and Hettie .Tcfferys.

Tennis TournamentDeadline Tomorrow

Entries Close Tomorrow For I'N e t Tourney ConductedHere By CARTERET PRESS

Event — Fun For PublicLooting On From Safe Dis-tance — Chicken DinnerServed.

Report* Of Work ReceivedAt Health Board Meeting

Routine business was transactedlast night at a short mating of theBoard of Health, Reports werp re-ceived on work that i<< bring done inCutting rag weed, spraying treesand cleaning ditches. The healthboard nurse, Mrs. J. Bodnar report-ed several eas«s of whooping coupiin the borough being cared for and144 children being given immuniza-tion treatment against diphtheria.

The deadline for entriestennis tournament conducted

in' theby the

k

Nut Club MeetsPastry Next Week

Victory Will Give Shanley-BellClan Third Straight In Sec-ond Half Race.

The Cardinals and the Maeka, tiedfor second placeLeague, will bittfls

•TwilightTues-

loom used for meetings by the board,, and that the two rooms be used. I.Members of the board discussed the

dviiability of meeting in Borough!all or in. one of the other schools.Of interest to parents of Carteret

list of higher institutions of...ing where graduates of the lo-"high school are now studying or~ studied since graduating here.

list includes Harvard, Columbia,Rutgers and many other nationallylenown American colleges besides afew in Europe. Miss Hermann point-ed out that admission to these col-leges shows that Carteret high schoolas a thoroughly approved and ac-credited high school, on a par withany in. the land.

Commissioner Mittuch wanted toknow if the pupils were required, toattend some preliminary school be-fore entering the colleges hMed. MissHermann said that certain of thanecolleges have such requirements butthat they are required of pupils fromany high school in the country; therequirement betnt an arbitrary oneof the college ami in no sense a re-flection upon the high .school attend-ed by the pupil.

Regarding the commercial depart-ment the supervising principal pre.seated statistics showing thut forty-four per cent of the graduates of theCommercial Departnieiif of highschool are employed which is an ex-ceptionally high percentage at thistime of economic depression.

Discussing special subjects MissHermann said sho believes in HoyScouts, school oi'tthitetru, school jbuiubiand Other school clubs. She declaredin favor of hobbies in and out olschool to give interest and directionto the activities of pupils out ofschool hour*. The pupils spend eighthours in school, sleep eight hoursand have eight hours free. Theschool, she said, endeavors as fur aspossibl t id fitable topics

day evening at the high school field.On Thursday of next week the NutClub, holding first place in the sec-ond half struggle, will endeavor toincrease its lead when it meets thePastry Hoys, who so far this halfhave failed to win a game.

A glance at the standing in thesecond half race reveals the teamslined up m exactly the reverse ol-der from that, they held the first half.The Nut Club which wound up in thecellar in the initial .semester is infirst place. The Curtis who finishedthird are tied with the Macks forsecond place and the Pastry Boys,winners in the first half, are restingpeacefully in last place.

CARTERET PRESS during the weekstarting July 24 closes tomorrownight. Letters postmarked later thantomorrow will not be accepted.

So far the response of the tennisplayers in this horou-gh has not beenvery encouraging.

Those enUved in the singles are:Phil Chodoah, I*wrence Ruhel, Mi-chael Razaral, /irthur Schonwpid,John Sidnn, Sol Price, Maurice Cho-dosh, .lake Chodosh, Andrew Hila,Tom Richards, John Goyena.

Those entered in the doubles are:Phil Chodosh, i^awrence Rubel; JohnGoyena, Michael Bnzaral; MauriceChodosh, Jake Chodosh; Sol Price,Norman (lodei-sUul.

Felix Shay To SpendVacation In Sewaren

First White Man To TravelFrom Cairo To CapetownW i l l Visit Sister, Mrs.Madge Murphy.

Felix Shay, the first white man totravel the dangerous overland routefiom Caiio to Capetown, renownedglobe-trotter, author, and intimatefriend of the great Albert Hiibhard;will spend the month of August withhis sister, Mrs. Madtfe Murphy, ofSewaren.

Mr. 3hay ia the author of "filbertHubbard of East Aurora", a bookdevoted to the life and work of hisfriend and "From Capetown toCairo Overland", which is a recordof his African expeiiencea.

For many years Mr. Shay has beenon the staff of the National Cleographic magazine, and, upon the com-pletion of his adventurous Africanjourney, that magazine devoted anentire U»ue to hia trip. lie was editorof the Roycroft publications in EastAurora, N. Y., and proved himself anaWc nweewwtr -to hip friend, MV.Hubbard, who once said of him, "Haknows me a little better than anyliving man."

Mr. Shay tins traveled about theworld for many years, seeking ad-vonture iff out-of-the-way places, andtelling of his thrilling experiencesduring1 countless lecture tours, thefirst of which was a tour of the Brit-ish Isles and the Continent in 1912.Since then he has addressed largeand interested audiences in all thoprincipal cities of the United States.

was plenty of fun and notTTtTft excitement last night when

initiation ceremonies were hold forfour new members of Fire CompanyNo. 1. The initiation ceremonies ofthis company have 'become a tradi-tion that dates hack to the start ofthe borough or earlier. It is usuallya summer ceremony because a gooddeal of water is used. The new mem-bers receive a thorough ducking ina special tank and the firemen dmpiny a liberality1, that extends to sunIry nKhers who receive a pail of wuter from second story windows orthe roof of the firehouw as they en-ter tho building.

At a safe distance a large gather-ing of spectators enjoy the fun. Thefour initiated last night were: Her-bert (Curley) Sullivan, CharlesCrnne, Charles Rapp and TheodoreFalconer.

After the water initiation therewas a chicken dinner served in thedining r«">m on the wcoru) floor. AHmembers of tho company, many vis-itors and officials were present.Councilman Charles A. Conrad andEdward Dolan were among theguests last night and spoke as didseveral others present. C. C. ShorUdfin was the toastmaster.

A CommunicationDear Kditor:I meet Scrogjjins and bis fool

cross eyed cat the other day and,honest, it takes me n«ar half a hourto stop laughinfr at 'em and startasking questions. You sec, Mr. Edi-tor, I've seen that there oat withall kinds of rigs but this one has theothers barked off the stage. Its akind of red turban or something ontop of the cat's heed so you don'tsee no ears or nothin and it's alled. Then on the front they's a little

brass knife only it':, big itt the nmnll:nd if you get what I mean.

Well, Sir when I get so I can talk1 shoot some questions at old Scrog-gins like this: "What's the red sig-

ROMAN MICKLA

Funeral service was held Mondajfor Roman Mickla of 118 iSharotstreet who died ut the age of (SOFriday in the Perth Amboy GeneralHospital. Mr. Miekla was a residentof Carteret for the past thirty years.He had been ill a long time preced-ing his death. Surviving are: a. wi-dow Susan, und two sons, Peter andRoman all of Carteret.

The funeral service was held inSt. Elius Gre«J< GttUwliv Church. In-terment was in the Greek Catholic,cemetery in Perth Amboy.

nal on the cat's head?"That there," says Scrofpgins, "Is

a fez".And what the devil is a fez " I

comes back."A fea", says Scroggins, "is a

turk's hat.""Why put it on the kitty " I asks."because that foi>l cat is a Turk,"

says Scroggins. "I fixed that cat upwith some nice fish heads and othercat delicacies and the old fool car-

Chrome Couple WedIn Ukrainian Church

Miis EVA Bober and SJtaadeyKondas United WednesdayEvening—Will Live In Mer-cer Street.

MIM Evai Bober, daughter of Mrs.Thecla, of 52 Essex street, and Stan-ley Kondas, non of Mr. and Mrs.Thomas Kondaa, of \\ Mercerstreet, were married Wednesday eve-ning at 7 :30 o'clock in St. DemetriusUkrainian Catholic Church by Rev.Father John Hundiak, the pastor.The bridesmaid was MiflR Stella Kon-das, & siRter of the hridegroom andthe heat man was John Smith.

The. bi ide woie ft riMtumc of bin"chiffon and hat anil slippers tomatch, she carried tea roaest. MissKondas wore a white ensemble withhat and slippers to match and rar-rifld pink roses,

Mr. and Mrs. Kondas will resident 17 Mercer street. The bridegroomin rwplny«d »t th» plant of yjf II, M.Metals Refining Company.

Fr. Galassi HonoredBy His Parishioners

At Farewell Party In PortReading Last Night—PriestWho Spent Many Years InThis Section Must Leave ToRegain. Health — ProminentSpeakers.

PORT READING -• Reverend Co-lumbine Galassi, who established St.Anthony's church in Porl. Headingtwenty4wo< years ago and has servedthe people of his jmiifh faithfullyand well since that time, was givena farewell party last night in hisPort Reading church. Father Galassihas been forced to leave his parisheshere and in Perth Amboy, where howas pastor of Our Lady of the MostHoly Kosary church,, until he can regain his health.

The party was arranged by Joseph

Refrigerator BlamedFor Restaurant Alaze

Brotkwrs Lunch in RooaeveltAvonu* Gutted By EarlyMorning Fire — Smok« andWater Damage Places Near-by.

Fire which w*« attributed to ashort circuit in an electrical r?frigerator was discovered yesterdayabout 3 a. m. in the Brothers I,unrh,a restaurant at 82 Roosev«lt awnnoin thp Chrome section. The fire hadgained a good deal of headway whenthe Pre department arrived in an-swer to an alarm from Box 32.Flams* hud eaten their way in nildirections from the refrigerator andthe entire place was badly gutted be-fore thf> firemen got it under control.It was nn hour before It wa<i out.

Damage is estimated at anywherefrom $2,000 to $3,000 a nd may bemuch more. The notisp belongn toPhilip Krinzman, a Chrome grocer,firemen said. The proprietor of therestaurant is John Sguras.

Besides the damage to the restau-rant, smoke and wiiter damaged, g dhat cleaning place nnd a barbershopadjoining.

Semi-Pro Base BallHere Next Friday

Carteret All Stars To Inaugu-rate Weekly Attraction AtHigh School Field By Meet-ing Harrisburg C o l o r e dGiants.

Semi-pro twilight league baseballwill be inaugurated in this boroughnext Friday evening at the highschool field when the Ciirteret AllStars, composed entirely of Carter-•t ball players, meet th*> Harrisburtr'oloral Giants, one of the leadingolored iiggregntiotis in central Jer-

sey, in th« first of a serieu of Fri-d i h

lies it off and leave* trie whole lotwith A bunch of- strange cats he ftiptnever «U$••'.bgtaw.'i- ••+..

"Say, says I "that reminds me Q{something. I heard that a local poli-tician went to a picnic in East Rail-way Sunday and spent five bucks be-fore he woke up and found he didn'tknow on« guy at that picnic andnone of them live where they canvote for him."

Maybe that guy was a Turk, too,"says Scroggins.

HUCKl.KHE-RRY HESS.

Checks Here Soon ForFamilies Of Corps Members

Bids for school supplies) were re-ceived from J. L. Haiiimett Companyof Newark, $1,(>00, und Pecknian,Little. & Co., of New York, $l,(5<i7-,1'i for supplies for the schools. Thellammett Company was awarded thecontract, being the lowest bidder.

A letter was received from theState Federation of District Hoardsof Education outlining valuable workiluiu: by the league in opposing legis-lation harmful to the interests of thepublic schools und furthering favur-iihle legislation.

The annual re.purl of the districtclerk was received and filed after afew uf Hie high spots were explain-ed.

Afrom

coiifiiHiiiieutioii was r«c«Wed

Community Bible SchoolTo Close Tonight; Program

The Community Summer Bibleschool will close tonight with a "TripThrough The Bible To Find the Wayof Life". The program will bo &c'v~en in the Sunday school room of thePresbyterian church beginning at7:45. All are cordially invited to at-tend. The picnic for the members ofthe school will be huld tomorrow af-ternoon. Thu pupils will be taken toWaranoco Park by bus. The bus willleave the Presbyterian church at1:00 o'clock and stop at the St.Murk's Kpiseopal church, leavingthere at l:lf>. There has been keencompetition for the highest numberof points during the last week. Har-old Edwards has held the. first placeall week, hut the standing of thenext three or four have changednearly every day. At the close of theThursday session. Jack Humphriesstood second, Fred Johnson thirdand Wilton Stewart fourth, withonly about ten points between them.

Hebrew Ladies CombineOn Big Picnic Plan

The combined Hebrew Ladies ofthe borough including all' gTOupa.were, represented ut u meeting heldMonday night in the synagogue ofthe Brotherhood of Israel when planswere made for a picnic to be held

Walsh, Emergencywas advised today

C

Mr. EdwardRelief Director ythat the checks for the Civilian Con-servation Corps will be received be*tween July 12, and July 20. Hereaf-ter the subsequent, checks will be re-ceived before the 8th of each month.The delay was caused by the boysbeing in Idaho. Mr. Walsh also re-ports that in the Ifcst month and ahalf there has been a decrease of H!>cases due to. men finding employ-ment and through investigation,There ure now ;((J1 cases against theformer peak of 450.

PersonalsThe Children of Mary of the Sac-

red Heart Roman Catholic Churchwill hold an outing tomorrow ut LakeHopatcong.

L. Gill, who acted as toastmasterThe first speaker of the evening waMayor William A-. Ryan, of wood-•btiflge, who etpi'es&ed the nope thatwas felt by all that Father G-alasswould soon be restored to health nndhe able to come hack among thenonce more. Rev. Edward Cahill, pastor of St. Mary's church in PerthAmboy, expressed sincere love amaffection for Father Ualassi. Shorspeeches were also made by Rev.Paul Fairbrother, of Perth Amboy;Rev. Hickey, successor to Father Ca-Inssi; Jacob Ornusam, Henry St.(Hair Lavin, William Brown, superititendent of the Reading coal docks,James E. Filer, of tho Hoard of Kd-ucation, and Robert L. Satller. Someof the speakers told of the work thathad been accomplished by FatluvCalassi in the spiritual field, othersspoke of the civic improvements, yetin all of them was the sincere ex-

resaion of love for a priest, cki/.ennil neighbor.

In reply, Father Galassi thankedis parish fur this display of lovund affection und ulso expressed hiaogret upon leaving the people who.vere so dear to him and had je'venliin such valuable assistance and en-ouragement in the past.

A sum of money was presented to•"ather Galassi as a token of appre-iation from his parish. A vocal se-

lection was given by Mr. Hates, ac-companied by Mrs. Eslelle Christo-pher. Music was furnished by Joseph^allahan's orchestra1 from Perth Ani-soy. Refreshments were served.

day night games to be promoted byCurley Sullivan.

Sullivan announced last, night thuthas secured the use of the high

school field for Friday nisbt base-all, lie sfiiil he hopes to continue

with this new venture as, lontf as hehas the support of Carteret fans.

He will us*1 Carteret. players only.His pitching selwlimi will pmliublybe Stanley Kosel, big righthander,who has been showing class all sea-son, Mickey D'zurilln will be on thereceiving end. Hie infield will becomposed of Dinney Combo, MickeyMiglecz, Sam Smolensk! and FrankYap. The outfield will be covered byLukusiak, Kara and Heaa Sullivan.

The game will st"rt promptly atfi'.lS o'clock with a capable umpinon hand.

Schedule PlannedFor Boplmrd F o t

Delegation and Council Agr»«On Schedule, Up To PublicService To Approve It.

A delejration of twelve resident*of the Boulevard action attended ameeting of the borough council Mon-day njjfht to help work out a sched-ule of bun service to meet the n*ed«of that section. The Boutfvard hasheen more or leiw isolnted *inc« thoKmtllne trolley system wan discon-tinued. A r«-pr*9«nUtive of the Pub-lic Starrier! Coordinated Transportwas there, too, Charlen Callnnan.Protest h»d been made by the resi-dents of the Boulevard o**r thtirlack of traveling facilities, »nd theyhad petitioned the council for relief.The »djourned meeting* of the coun-cil Monday nifrht was the result.

There w»s much dincusnion. beforea ichndulp for weekdays was agreedupon. The Moulevard residents want-ed to be reasonable and did not de-mand that buse« make trips back and

I forth at hour* when there would belittle or nojpatronage.

The seheifule worked out for w««l(days w»s approved hy resolution ofcouncil and submitted for further»pprov»l by the Public Service Com-pany. It is as follows: forenoon —l> :3ft, "!:!>&, 9:55, and 11:25; after-noon—1.56, 3:&B, i.:lo, fi-55, 10-25and last niijht trip 12:45 a m.

In working out » schedule for Sun-days, the time of beginninit and clou-inut services in the various churchesin the borough wna carefully con-sidered. The following schedule wts

d upon an being satisfactory to*hu Bn()UvBr<l rtaidentx; torenoon—7:2ft, 8:55, 9:55; afternoon —I8:2r> P. M., 1:56, S:M, 0:55,. 10:25and last trip at, night 12:15. A. M.

If this schedule is approved by th*Public Service Company copies ofit will be printed and distributediming the Boulevard residents.

Councilman Philip Turk called at-ention to the condition of the twowlice cars, a Ford that is out ofommission and a Paifre that needsnuch repair. The chairman of the

police committee was authorised tonegotiate for a new car in the low

Mrs. John Hemse.1, of Washingtonavenue who has been ill for severalweeks was taken to the Rahway Me-morial Hospital yesterday where sheunderwent an operation this morn-ing.

The weekly card party in St. Jos-eph's Church hall tonight will be incharge of a committee including;Mrs. George Lackey, Miss Anna Nar-di, Mrs. John Auitn and Miss ZitaMellon.

possible to provide profitable topicsfor thought and interest during th«free hours. The supervising princi-pal also spoke of the refining in-fluence of such special aubjocta asmusic,' art and literature.

Cotumi&gioner Mittuch said he wasdelighted to hear an intelligent ex-planation of the valuable uses of thespecial subjects in view of the viciousattacks that were mad* recently up-on such subjects by "the very specialinterests" that attempt to dictate the

'./ affairs of the borough. These inter*eats, Hi. Mlttuoh said, were actuatedonly by their own greed for moneyand hopes to have the special a\4b-juctti tsKen off the* course in order touave a few dollars in taxes. He de-lated that the scljOol children of' • are as much entitled to a

education as children in anyother Unvn in the country.

Dr. H. h- Straudbeig said, the spe-cial subject* haxa *. high culturalvalue. . . . , < •

Several questions vere asked bymembers conewnujw the re-

Each meiub«r ifm wippUwia , c o p y . - •••• • • , . ; • • • , '

fiom the Carteret All Stars ballteam requesting the uae of the highschool field for twilight games. Therequest was granted on the conditionthut the games of this group do notinterfere with other athletic events.A request of Meyer Rosenblum,sports editor of the Carteret PressCor use of the school tennis courtsfor a tourney was referred to theathletic committee.

Miss Olive Gunderaon waa up-pointtd teacher i>£ Domestic Scienceto take tho place of Miss Mury Hoo-lihau, resigned.

A list of eighteen non residentapplicants for teaching jobs, waspresented by the teaehere committeeEh tho liflt WA» notifiepEach

y the teaehon tho liflt WA» notified

i tEacthat preference would be givenC t t j t h in making appoithat preferne g toCttrterctj teachers in making appoint-ments.

Tho committee on transportationreported that owing to the adoptionof a nix months budget the commit-tee has a gap of four months begin-ning in September when there ia nocontract for transportation and nomoney immediately avuikble toraai* the cost. The committee wasiiuthorUttd to confer with tne car-rier* nnd try to extend the contractsto «OW the period. The result willhe reported to the board at the next

were made fo a pSunday, August 13, on Anderson'sfarm in Shady Brook road, Bonham-town. The admission charge will be20 cents. Dancing will be free.

Mrs. Isadora Brown is generalchairman in charge. Transportationwill he in charge of Mrs. JamesBrown and Mrs. Lao K. Hrown thruwhom reservations are to b« made.

Announcements will be made laterregarding the mode of transporta-tion and leaving time. The affair isplanned to be. one of the biggest out-door events of the season.

Club and CongregationTo Plan For Picnic

The German-American Citizens'Club met last nitfhl in the Lutheranhall and made arrangements for aiuint meeting of tlie club and thecongij*«ati(m ot Oho German Lu-theran Church to be held Monday

i h i h h l l f r the purnight in thef l

yhull for the pur-i i b

Wtinic iJuly 24

adjourned to msecmeeting.

again cm July"24 when the bids fo*replacement of lavatories will be re-oeived a»d. opened. AH the membersof th,* liody were present at th?mfirttif: •• \ :

pose of planning a picnic to be spon-sored by the two organisations.

Firemen Hear Report*;Exemption For Kennedy

A regular meeting of Piie Com-pany No. 2 was held iu the fir*)hou»0Monday night when reports were, re-wivnd on tlje recent dance ana ewdimrty. A certificate of sx&uptioawas iwnlwi to Joeeph Keiuwdy whohas »erv«d Ma full m«m. ye*rs a* a

Mr. and Mia. John Famill, ofjlenn Cove, L. I., have been visit-ng Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kinnelly.

Randolph Street ManDenies Hitting Chinaman

Charles Dumondor Dumont, aged24 of Randolph street, was arraign-ed in police court last night on complaint of Sam Wah, a Chinese laundry man of the hill section who saidDumont struck him. Dumont deniedthe charge. There wew no witnessesand the case wits dismissed.

Mother-Teachers OutingAt Asbury Park Thursday

An outinir to Asbury Park will bheld Thursday under the auspices olthe Mother-Teacher Association ofthe Presbyterian Sunday school. Thetrip will be made in a large chartered bus which will leave Riyrp's audi-torium at IU a. in. and will leave thePresbyterian church at 10.15.

Americana Meet WoodbridgeColored Giants Here SundayThe. Americans, victorious in theif

kbt two games, will play tk& Wood-bridge Colored Giants at

;>rice range. Some resolutions re-pecting finance were adopted.

Twi League Votes ToReturn Entrance Fees

Board Of Director* HoldsPromise To Refund EntranceFees To Team*.

Foresters To ResumeInitiation Fees For Members

At a meeting of Court CarteretNo. 48 Foresters of America Tues-day night in Odd Follows hall an-nouncuniuut was mad« thut the reg-ular initiation fees will be resumedill all muses of new members joiningthe organization. The fees weradropped for tho period of a member-ship drive. \) report was presentedby the auditing committee upon a

t di f th b k f thyrecent audit

ourt. Other

gof throutine

pbooks of thebusiness wasc o u . Oh

discussed. TV meeting wua well at-tended.

b g o tyfteld next Sunday afternoon. CorkyAndres will t*ke the mound for thelocal*.

Jr. C. E. Closes SeasonWith Social In S. S. Room

The Junior Christian Endeavorheld a social Saturday afternoon iuthe Sunday school room of the Prus-byterlan church. Games were playedand refreshments wer* served.

Irene Hemael received a Biblefrom Christian Endeavor for a iecord of no tardiness e.r absence frommeetings.

Those present were: Irene Hem-8el, Emma LorenU, Huth Houry,Faith Wilgus, Erika Wulf, StephenMucha, Jameu Kiddle, Cladys O'Do|i-nedd and Mrs. Cornelius Doody.

Mrs. Tobias Garter I*Hostess At Bridge

Mrs. Tobias Curlier of Lowellstreet entertained last night iu. herhome at bridge. Among the guestswere: Mrs. Alex LeBow, Mrs. J.Welw, Mii8 Clara Stern, Mrs. JuliusKlow, Mr*. Bernard Kahili Mrs. Mor-ris S|?ew»k, Mrs. Morris Ulman.MM. BmanueJ Ufkowik and Mra. D.Lasner.

International TrackMeet At Palmer Stad.

Brilliant Performances Antici-pated At Meet In PrincetonTomorrow Afternoon—StarsOf Note To Run.

PRINCETON, N. J., July 14 —Brilliant performances ure anticipated at the international track meebetween combined teams of Oxforiand Cambridge Universities, of England, and of Princeton and CornellUniversities, of this country, whichwill be held in Palmer Stadium,Princeton, <beKinmnK at 4:30 on Satunlay afternoon, July 15th. Meelrecords are expected to fall whertwo intercollegiate champions anthree former intercollegiate, champ-ions vie with one another and withother Kritish and American stars.

Some of the luces are expected tobe but little short of Olympic (lames'calibre. The atmosphere which ac-companies international competitionwill be heightened by the method ofconducting the meet. Only firstplaces will count iu the team scorjand, ut the conclusion of each event,a bugle will; be sounded and the flajjuf the country winning it will behoisted on a flag-pole. One event ata time will be run off and, in thecase of the field events, the individ-ual competitor and the result of hiseffort will be announced as the trialsproceed.

Princeton'* Grawt Star to HunThe. foreimmt runner of either

team is William It. Bontbrun, ufPrinceton, who was one of the sensations of the spring season und whohas been recognized hy tr»i:k expert*as being the equal of the great JohnPaul Jones. Uonthron is intercolWgiate. champion in the KUO and 1,500-meter runs, and accomplished the al-mont unprecedented feat of scoringfirst places in these two events anain thu 3,000-meter run, as well, iithe Yale-Princeton track meet iiMay.

Each team is excedingly well bftlanced. The British team, its sea-legsworn otf in the Yale-Harvard meet

Holding its promise, the board ofdirectors of the Carteret Twilljjftt

ague at a regular meeting in PhilTurk's Roosevelt Diner Mondaynight voted to return entrance fewto all four teams in the league. Ed-ward Skeffington, manager of thePastry Hoys, submitted his entrancefee.

All outstanding bills were paid.Upon a request by Kd Mack, nmn-

a 'i'r of the Macks, to use two addi-tional players who were not on hisplayer list, the board voted to giveliim conditional permission to usethem for the present.. The playersare, Hob Richey and Joe Terebecki.

The board decided to retuA thehiiliuice uf the buKelmlls on hand ifthey were, found to be unuati9fac-

A plea was made by the board forbetter attendance and cooperationOIL the part of the citizens of thoborough in supporting the leaguemul helping to put it over. It waspointed out that the league wa3formed for the interest of the base-lull fans of the borough and itshould be up to them to support andmaintain it.

INSTATESTha Daughter of An>erl# met

last night ana installed officer*, wFellows ball.

St. Joseph's JuniorsWin 13th Straight Game

The St. Joseph's Juniors won theirthirteenth straight game this week,defeating Waslyk's All Stars by a 10u 1 score. .

The batteries: St. Joseph's, Pat-ick and Suniutka.

All Stars, Waslyk, J. Pado, and.'aryo.

The McKinley Ramblers scoredtwo one-sided victories this week, de-feating the Majestic A. C, 15 to 2,and the Junior Aces, 12 to 1.

The score by innings:Ramblers 212 160 010—12Juniors 010 000 000— 1

The score by innings:Ramblers 1530 001 5—1&Majesties 000 020 0— 2

The Misses Miles ReturnFrom Stay In Virginia

Tin* Misses Natalie and KempeMiles, daughters of Mr. and Mrs.Russell Miles of 57 Atlantic street,

returned homo after a stay ofweeks at Roanoke, Va. Miss

( i t Saturday and bolstered byAi

W yrive former American stars, may posalbly f()>•«<! again into the lead in thtinternational series which fS" noweven, England having won iu lt)2[and 1926 and thu Americans in 1929and 11)30. The first meet, in 1921,resulted in a tie.

lutvi:ftktinNatalieed fro

Milua recm PTTO'S I

R ,recently was graduat-' Institute where she

led fr Pcompleted a course in fashion illus-trating.

T6 U5T---Tbrea room flat vfithbath and itl taipro*«meptc, Nece lo.carton; rsaionable reiU. Inquire J.Muehi, 108 Luwttll street, Carteret.

Druids Picnic To BeHeld Sunday At Oak Ridge

A picnic will be held Sunday atOak Ridge under the auaipices ofMiddlesex Grove No. VA Ancient,United Order of Druids. The tripwill be made in buses that will le*veCurteret at 8 a. m. On the commit-tee in charge are: Anthony UUers-berger, Adolph Nerinjc and JohnHorn.

Lady Druid* To HoldMeeting—Card Party Moo.

A card party wd meeting will beheld Monday night next under theauspice* of tho Lady Dvuid* in, 9ir«-houae No. 1. The .comjaitte* on ar-

PRESGYTERIAN NOTES"Conserving One's Powers" will

be the theme of the aennon at thePresbyterian Church on Sundaymorning.

Thts trustees will hold it meetingoa Friday evening at the home ofDr. H. L. Strainlbergtt 0:30.

On Thursday, July 20th, thu mem-bers of tne Mother Teacher Associa-tion will jo to Asbury Park for aday's outiiig. They will make thetrip iu "Miss Carteret" and plan toleave the church about 10:00 o'clock.

Leather Is Going UpHave Your Shoes Repaired

NOWAt Old Prices

FRITZ GALLEQuick Sko« Rtf*iri

Att.ntioc To L«dio«'Dy«d A»y Color

All Work Gmurantwd

Schuck and Mr* MatUat JSei&el,

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Lu.itama "Victim"It Ditcoyered Alive

Geneva, N. Y.—Mary Thompson,thirty-nine, who for the pn*t eight-een years tins been mourned asone of the victims of the l.usltanln, hit been found olive.

A letter received by a slstpr ofthe missing girl wn» bellered tobe a mlRtnke but Investigation dis-closed she wns alive In AtlanticCity.

Him Thompson had contemplat-ed boarding the Lusltanla to en-gate In war work overseas, bat un-known to relatives abandoned thetrip.

A letter written by Miss Thomp-son after the Lusltanfa disasternever was delivered and receivingno answer, ghe quit her efforts tocommanlcate with relatives, Iftno-rtnt m the fact that she was be-lieved dead.

THREE DOGS LIVEHIGH THESE DAYS

NOW SHOWING AT MAJESTIC.

Two Save Owners' Live*; Third,Matter'* Roll.

Toledo, Ohio.—Three faithful dogs InToledo, Ohio; Hugo, Colo., and Peters-burg, Vs., are getting extra largebones to chew on these days. Theyhave laved lives and money.

Attracted by the barking of the fam-! V&'a pet police dog. Mrs. ffidith Davis,I of Toledo, ran townrri n nearby creek,Nearing the stream. Rhe was met bythe dog, which caught her sleeve tnhis teeth and led her to the water.

Harks on the hank showed the doghad pulled Howard Davis, three, Mrs.DftTii' son, from thr rrcoh Into whichhe hid fallen.

Thrown from his wagon when blateam ran away during a snowstorm,Ed Brlezel, of Hugo, suffered a brok-en leg. Unable to crawl and In dangerOf freezing to death, he lighted amatch and with I he burnt end scrib-bled a note on a cigarette paper. Thenbe fastened the note to his dog's col-lar and told him to go straight home.The dog did, and Hrlezcl was saved.

A bag containing $50 was lost byJ. 8. Moore, tn Petersburg. A fewdays later be saw a puppy playingwith a bag In tl'" rear of his placeof business. He went to Invefflgafe,but before he could get to the puppya large pointer appeared and tookthe bag from the small dog.

A retrieving setter, Mr, Moore's dog,was with him at the time. A word ofcommand sent the setter after thepointer. The setter took the bag fromthe other dog and Indeed It back. Ex-amination proved It to lip the missingbag, with the WO Intact

Telltale Bells ThwartThose Lying to Wives

London.—There are 22 men In Brg-land who can never be untruthfully"detained at the office."

They are the 22 rash members ofparliament who have "business" belliInstalled In their homes. These 4>ellsannounce to tbe second when thehouse has risen, so that wives cancalculate to the second when theirlord and master's key should be heardat the front door.

Mrs, Geoffrey Mander, wife of theM. P. for Wolverharapton. Bays:

"The bell was Installed to pleaseme; It was not my husband's sug-gestion. It rings regularly at 0:45a. m. for testing, at 2:45 p. m., whenthe speaker Is tn his chair, and atthe minute the house rises, as wellas when there is a vote,"

"You must find It nseful," suggesteda friend,

"It Is. I set the clocks by It," shereplied, with a twinkle In her eye.

FRANK MORG&N', ANN HARDING SVDNA LOY in-WHFN LADIES M t f l

plot of which finds its outlet wln'iitill four persons concerned tin1

brought tnijothfli' «t. the countryhome of Alice Brady, and arc forcedto thresh out their respective emo-tional complevcp.

The action of the pirture startswith a party ' on a millionaire'shouseboat, shifts to Miss Ixiy's smartGreenwich Village garden apartmentand ends at Miss Brady's countryhomestead, portrayed ns an old farm-house which tins boon artfully rebuiltto include the more luxurious ap-pointments of its wealthy tenant.The settings were designed by Oed-ric Gibbons with interiors by EdwinWillis, the well-known decorator,anil lht\v Hie ifpuited In 1»<* tbn moststunning #et devised for film use.

PERTH A P O Y ' SLEADING THEATRES

He Takes Sidewalk andHouse When.He Moves

Gary, Ind.—Only the concrete-linedbasement of the home of George Fll-Kutt remained after he bad movedfrom Gary to Chicago.

Board of works members were puz-zled, since Fllyutt was believed tohave owed for special assessmentson the sidewalk and a mortgage fore-closure wan pending.

Three weeks were required for FI1-gutt to complete the moving opera-tions. First went the family and thehousehold furnishings. Later tbehouse was hoisted upon rollers androlled down the street. Then FUguttreturned with a truck mill loaded thecement slabs of the sidewalk outo thevehicle and drove awuy.

"When Ladies Meet"Tells Matrimonial

Story In New lightAnn Harding, Robert Mont-

gomery Co-Starred In FilmWhich Opens At MajesticTomorrow.

An exceptionally atronjc cast wasassembled by MutroGoldwyn-Mayer-Cosmopolitan fur its film version ofthe Rachel Crotheiu stairu success,"When Ladies Meet", which opensan engagement ut the Majestic Thea-tre tumeffrow. Ann Harding- and Rob-ert Montgomery are co-starred andthe other principal roles ure filledby Myrna Loy, Alice lirady andFrunk Morgan.

Tho distinguished Miss Harding,whose hits range from "Holiday" tothe recent "Animal Kingdom , en-acts the publisher's wife in MistsCrothers' biting drama i*f four peo-ple whotm lives are brought to a cli-mactic point ut a seemingly peace-ful country week-end party. Mont-gomery, kst sew in "Hell Belo^",is the shrewd young newspapermanwho creates a rkticious liaison be-tween himsejf ami .the publisher'swife in order to attract the iritureatof fche woman he really loves.

TJwMh Out CompUi«It is MiBB Loy, a risinjf young nov-

elist, whom Montgomery loves, butMiw Loy believes heraeli to be enam-ored of the publisher, played byFrank Morgan. It i» this cm*~cro#ncorn-plication 'of infections -whichforms the unusual dramatic struc-ture of "Wh«nl Ladle* Meet", the

Tel. 4-1593CONTINUOUS

STARTS SATURDAY

JAMES CAGNEY

COMING TOMAJESTICTOMORROW

"WHEN LADIESMEET"

with

ANN HARDINGRobt. MONTGOMERY

ALICE BRADY

COMING TOMAJESTIC

JULY 19

"ITS GREAT TOBE ALIVE"

withHERBERT MUNDIN

•nilEdaa May OLIVER

Tremendous Cast Of500 Used In Cagney

Hit "Mayor Of Hell"Five Hundred Men, Women

and Children Play Bit» aridPrincipal Role. In StirringFilm.

One of the laiyest ensts of theyenr wont into tb» making of theWarner Bros, picture, "The Mayorof 11*11", the juvenile edition of "IAm a Fugitive From a Chain Gang ,starring James Cagney, which comesto the Strand Theatre tomorrow.

Some five hundred men, womenand children, all playing bits amiprincipal roles, were used In tillsstirring story which denln with n dramntie fifrVit against graft and corrup-tion in n boys' reform school.

Approximately 350 young boys be-tween the ages of 12| and IB workedthroughout the making of the film asinmates of a reform school, at whichthe treatment is worse than that ofsome of the chain gang camps. Anumber of these youngsters pinyroles equal in importance to those ofthe adult players. Among the younghoys assigned outstanding parts are

CARTERET PRESS

Frankie Darro, FVrina, George Oforman, Jr., Sidney Miller, Mickey B#n-nett, Raymond Bonage and CharlesCane.

The loading feminine role In thppicture was given to Madge Evans,who HppoiiiH for UIB ftnrt limp f,(,"jmsite James Cagney. The raro comcdy of Allen Jenkins ia g iven oppnr.tunity in nnothor prominent part.Other screen favorites who bavorules of importance include Durtlpy"iKRe*, Arthur liynm. Sheila Terry,Hubert Harrnt, Harold Huber, Doro-thy Peteraon, George Pat Collins,Kifwin Maxwell, John Marston, Wil-liam V. Mong, Charles Wilson, Ho-lm it. Cavannugh and George Hum-lu'l-t.

The story by Islin Auater is a rev-olution of shocking conditions in acertain so-called reformatory wherehoys me caged like wild animals,half starved and flogged WitTi a cat-o'-ninc-taiU for the slightest infrac-tion of harsh and arbitrary rules. Itis a picture of pathos, tragedy andthrills, relieved by p glowing1 ro-mHnce in which love brings about thereform of the abuses.

The screen adaptation was madeby Edward Chodorov and directedby Archie Mayo.

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CARTERET PRESS FRIDAY, JULY 14,1988 Tk<G*

Choosing A Summer Camp

Hy thp Edith I). Diunn

Biforp rhoosinp; a summer campfor their children, parents should in-., i.nl.ipnrp and (t*>iM(t<» If ttra <-amp un-,'li-r consideration cftn qualify as a,lpsirable one from the standpoint ofit-i purpose, physical stiiToiin clings,n n , | democratic atmosphere.

In ntudyinp tha purpose of the

camp, parents should decide whetherit is an educational iwHtntiOtt w s>business enterprise. Beware of theshrewd husincw woman who in run-nine a camp na nn easy means ofmakinjr money, or the skillful butplih salesman who makes up in fflow-mg advertising what, he lacks in edu-cational training. To make of a campan ediirational institution, it munt beconducted by n director who has annnderilnndinsr nf rliilil nnlnre nn,| ii

THE GARDEN ILANWants of late cabbage should he

set into tho garden by July 10. Pre-pare the ground by digging underthe residue from other crops. A lilfhtapplication of fertiliser may hespread along the row and worked in-to the soil to give the cabbage someplant nutrients to feed on whenplanted,

During the first 2 weeks, in Julythe weather Is naturally hot and dry*If the soil is very dry make a holeabout 3 inches deep where the plantis to be set out. Use a hoe for thiswork and fill the hole with water.Then Bet out the plants and sec thatdry soil Is pulled well in over themto prevent evaporation of the water.If the weather is very hot, plant inthe late afternoon. A ball of soilaround the roots of each plant willhelp keep the plant from severe wilt-ing in the hot sun.

Plant late cabbage IS to 20 inch-63 apart in the row, and the rowa

approximately 30 inche* apart. Fallobaife (rrnws larger than spring;

cabbage and requires more room fordevelopment. The cultivation ofgreen sproutirifj broccoli, Oalabrase,is almost the name as that of fallcabbage. Planting distances are iden-tical and if the broccoli in plantedIn the garden now it will produceopen flower heads in the, fall. Afterthe main flower head has been cutyaide shoots will form which will pro-duce a succession of smaller flowers,until freeze,

After the early planting of beetsand carrots ha3 been pulled, preparethe soil for late lettuce, beans, spin-ach or some other short season crops.After July 1st we still have 102growing days befoTe the first heavyfreezeB are due. Make successiveplantings of siring beans, for theyare easj| to grow and a good crop tuse immediately to can or dry forwinter use.

Oldunot.il* SaU StaM«For Juit*, Figure* Show

June Mien erf Oldsmohilf art amark 235 per cent above iart y*arand one that topped the May totalby 4R0 CBM, report* R. M. W. Shaw,Sales Manager for Old*mobile.

"This showing", said Mr. Shaw,"was no surprise, as th« sales inJune opened strong and showed aperiodical increase through the »n-

Ur* month. It it ffldtat that the na-tional buying povtr It Increasingand that It la favorably affecting oursales. June production and shipment*exceeded any JttBt tince 1924. Bothproduction and shipments) have b«*ncontrolled In line with retail aaleademand. Ui«d car stocks ar* at aminimum.

"Sales of Oldsmoblle In June,19S3, were 236 per cent of sales inJune of last year and represent thebust. June, for Oldsmobile in three

ytan. In addittoa. the nuMth i*h\-im«d a total of tat«t that b 460above those of May. So far as Julyis concerned, present orders Indf-cat* a velnm« of baalrwm aqaal tothat of Jun«. July production achad-nl«s call for production at the saaMmti> (K In Juni>."

Wilt CnataTla food will makes inteMfeiM*.—

Ruwton.

Keep Food in KelvinatorIt Will Keep Long and Well

spoonful of salad left from luncheonwill keep fresh in the Kelvinator Electric

Refrigerator, and make a tasty sandwich to-morrow or the next day. The trout that ar-rived on ice this morning will be fresh anddelicious next week if it is stored in Kel-vinator Frost Chest.

KelvinatoT four refrigeration temperaturesprovide preservation for nearly all perishablefoods. . ^

It pays to own a Kelvinator. It costs onlya few cents a day to operate. Buy food inbylk, it's cheaper that way and it will keepin Kelvinator. Small amounts of food can besared and combined with something elsedays later. •KELVINATOR CASH PRICES BEGIN AT $99.50

PVBLICQIESEHVICE275$

concerned with the needs of the in-dividual children under hia charge.Such a director will provide a pro-gram of activities that is appropriateand satisfying1 to the children. He al-so will provide supervision by re-sponsible counsellors who use good,judgment and insight in handlingchildren. Parents are justified in re-senting the presence of a counsellor—frequently he is a college under-graduate—who in untrained in theare of children.

In studying the physical surround-igs of the camp, it is well to note ifte location is hiffh enough to fur-inh adequate drmnnfro 'p thnre anmple supply of pure drinking wa-er? Is it free from swampy areas»hich breed malarial.mosquitoes? lahere a satisfactory seirnfe disposalystem? Septic tanks for sewage dis-osal and incinerators for eliminat-Mg wttiitu ore preferred for <'Hmpa.n the food prop»r«d «nd transport^)inder sanitary conditions? It, is we:ll

to know what arrangement* «remade for keeping food and for cov-ering garbage to avoid the menacing

The spirit of the camp should besuch that equality of opportunity isguaranteed BO that ov«ry oampw,whatever his inclinations or past ex-periences, is made to feel at homemd is assured a place in the campactivities. The atmosphere should beso democratic that social statusmeans nothing, personality andworth everything.

TiMf camp that has grown gradual-y from small beginnings, is morelikaly to meet these rt^uirementa1

than one that has sprung up mush-room-like, overnight. •

Next w*ek—"The Camp for the

eading Us field because*ifs the

STYLE LEADERRegistration figures mea l that very nearly ona out of

every three people who bay motor can today In Old*,

mobile's price field, lettles hto choice on OldsmobOft,

The net of the business if divided among ten different

can! The main reason for thfo Sofa Leadership is Styh

Leadership—for the new Oldamobile* are the smartest

car. in America, regardless of cost Come in today.

Yonil get a thrill out of Oldsmobile performance, tool

New Method of CleaningOats Increases Yield

Madison, Wls.—Dry cleaning of swcloats Is In fashion now.

After four years of experimenta-tion, James O. Dlekson and IV T). I.eithof the agricultural staff of tho tjnlvor-slty of Wisconsin have found that tlu>use of dust fungicides In treating outsfor smut results In hlRhor yields thnndoes the formaldehyle dip treatment.

Dipping tl)» seed In formaldehydesolution, unless dono with extremecare, may result In dnmnife to tj e seed,these Investigators reported. Theyfound that formaldehyde dust contain-ing 7 per cent or more formaldehyde,mixed with the onts In dugt tight con-tainers or cement mliers, la betterthan tho dip treatment and enn bemade several days In advance of

"sowing. *

Tarantula1! Bit*The bite of a tarantula Is painful but

not dBDgerooa, being more mechanicalthan venomous, and Inflicting a woundthat bleed* freely. .

Which Came Fir»t,Hen or Egg—Solved

Madrid -Which came first, thehen or the eggi A Spanlsl! eu-genics expert, Dr. Roberto NovoaSantos, claims to have found a so-rtition to this time-worn problem.Neither the hen nor the egg, butthe rooster.

That Is what Dr. Novoa Santostold an audience at the Universityat Madild. "Ood mado th» nmlofirst and then the female," he said.The address was part of the firstof a seAcs of conferences on ougenlcB, resumed after having beenordered discontinued during thedictatorship of Prlmo de Rivera.

— Please mention this paper to a<vertisers; it. helps you, it helps then-it helps your paper.

Men's DressSHIRTS

79cMatte of excellent quality

Broadcloth.Cut in tha Ut«it it>U.

Colon, White, Tan, Bluealio Fancy Pattern!.

CHILDREN'SSANDALS

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Patent Leather•trap Hy\»,

Wixrwall l«ath«r lolefive extra wear. Nefeenough for dre»s. Sturdenough for avd

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Black or Tan rsal lea-ther uppers.

Composition or leatherIOIM. Sturdy play shoe*that will wear morn thanjust a shoe.

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OLDSMOBILETJM %J* »?« <Wt «f, TW WGOT tty anduP...fo.b.Laming. .•• tjMUf tir* ami buaijwri astro • • - (kli.A-C.wm*

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FORA-COMPLETE-SELL-OUT

Building-In-ForeclosureIN - COURT - OF-C HANCERY

HUNDREDS OF BARGAINSL A D I E S ' D R E S S E S

WOMEN? - CHILDREN'S: - M S - J O E SLUGGAGE BAGS - JJMBRELLASHOSIERY U S E S - HOUSE DRESSESINFANTS' - CHILDREN'S WEAR

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L A D I E S H A T SDOMESTIC AND HECE GOODSCOSMETICS A N D I T O I L E T GOODS

SHOPEARLY

ANDSAVE

Page 4: Thi «v«rywhtre—Pay no mow KdsMcslnside CARTERE Carter ... · SBm Jim and Kelly ^e ^rice °* Thi ^P*s 1 is & centfl «v«rywhtre—Pay no mow KdsMcslnside CARTERECarter* BwMrfi

PAGE FOUK FRIDAY, JULY 14, 1933CARTERET

CARTERET PRESSSubscription, t l .60 Per T««rPublish*) E«rr Friday Bj

C. H. BYRNE, 130 Jersey St, CARTERET, N. J.Telephone Carteret 8-1600

C. H. BYRKK _ _. - Editor »nd OwnerMEYER ROSENBLUM ....: Sports Editor

Entered u second elans matter Jnne 5, 1924, »t Cartsret, N. J.,Pott O«e«. under the Act of March S, 1879.

Foreign Advertising Representative!New Jersey Neighborhood Newspapers, Inc.

NOT EIGHT MILES AWAYThe road map of New Jersey published by the State High-

way Commission shows that Pnmpton T/akes is about 8 milesfrom Wayne, N. J., as the crow flien. The other day, Wednes-day to be exact, a group of men left CartM-et and drove as faras West Point and return. On the way, they stopped for lunchat Pompton Lakes. In the restaurant a ridio was playing andthe program was so pleading that one "f the men commentedupon the fact. He also spoke of the clear reception and askedif reception was usually good at that elevation.

"That program is coming through from Cleveland", saidthe woman in charge of the restaurant," and we get grood re-ception on the part of the dial. But when it comes to the goodnearby programs we are out of luck." The woman went on tonay that the programs of WOR, WJZ and other stations aremarred by interference caused by Station WABC at Wayne,eight miles away.

That should interest people living in Carteret. StationWABC at Wayne is the same type of power transmitter utation jthat WOR proposes to, build in the East Rnhwa.v section of jCarteret. Only the proposed WOR station will be bigger, morepowerful than WABC. How will such a station, not eight milesaway but right in our midst effect local reception?

No real guarantee has been given by WOR that if it iserected here the people will not suffer from interference. Rep-re.sentatives of the company behind the station make promisesbut carefully avoid anything in writing. When a man or menmake promises but will not back them up with anything sub-stantial how much are the promises worth?

FALSE REPORTSIn a statement issued Wednesday of this week John Colt,

state director of emergency relief, commented on widespreadreports "that the New Jersey relief administration is keepingon the relief roster individuals who have refused jobs, prefer-ring public aid to wages". "We have traced many such reports," Mr. Colt says, "and find in practically all such casesthus far investigated either that they are entirely without foun-dation or the wages offered are below the subsistence level orare a form of 'board and keep' only."

Mr, Colt refers, of course, only to reports dealing withthe state relief administration && a whole. But such reports arecommon in every community in the state regarding local reliefadministrations, And since the same general plan is being fol-lowed in moat.other states in the Union it is not an exaggera-tion to say that such reports are in circulation everywhere.

In fact the attitude in smaller communities is far more^bitter than that regarding the state administration. In the caseof the small community it is an attitude of personal hostilityto all municipal officials. The fact that officials have little ornothing to do with relief administration has nothing whateverto do with the case. The official is blamed blindly and viciously.Politics has nothing to do with it except that in some in&tanc-es politicians who are out stoop to take advantage of the situ-ation in the hope of throwing out those who are in power. Butthey might save themselves the trouble; no exertion is neededto stir up enemity toward those in power among that elementeffected by this strange phobia.

Relief administrations everywhere, trying to help those indistress are being rewarded senseless hatreds. It is one of thestrange angles of the depression.

/Me AAflCSST FISH £Vf/LCAUGHT IH FRESH mT£/Z.WAS A SWR.QEON,IHG IOOO POUNDS ANDWAS SNAKFD IHCOLUMBIA

TknvcxJ, M<mt)N WASOH W«r MX PQUC* FOftOT

ANDOMF AMU&r AHO

A

M O WAK RM ft TIMES AND W&HII VtCTQRJgS A? A. 3 YEAR, OLD.

Can ju1.! "Dig 'Em Up"? If so send them to us,and if acceptable, we will publish with your n."n \

Flt.h .tr»«t »Ui> me e» . l« ly lit,, of Pe»h-„ , avenue (formerly known as (olwsll

Hreet, thence. runnlni (1) In > n " r ' h ' r ' 'dlrecllnn »n.l Psrsllel » l th s.l.l Porsh ng„, . .„„ . and HI rUht Angle, to win PltCri• irert cine hunilred III)") leet t i a «*•*»,

running (!> In an easterly nlr«c-nd parallel with sal.! Pilch sir».»n,l rivnenllm (SOS) feft tn| a stake;

running (J) In » « " ' t h " l j dlrw-nil nurnliM with the flret inline one,

•mndreil 1101)1 left to nald line nf Fltrhthenie running M) 1n 1 newerly

rifty im.l flve-teiilhn < SO 5) feel to place.if HKISINN1NO

Itetn* part of the Battle premises con-vey,,! to Loo Iliii-kH-ian by ilee.1 of J»oob

«n.l Ma I*v«n«on. hl» wife, "far-ing dMe Murfh 6, I»2S sn<l rernnlwi In

(•ounly Clerk's Office.rierree. for Heconcl Trnrt imountlni tn>prollm»tely H.HS.3S.[lelnK lh« premises fnimnnnlj known and

as No». U 3H Fitch street. 6TJ-, ji Ruosevelt avenue. Carter*!, N, .1.Tnitetrier with sll and singular the rl«"ht»,

privllegen. hereilltsmenls anil appurlenan.-.'« (hereunto belonging or In Hnyuler. ftp-

ALAN H E1.V, Slierirf.THOMAS H. HA<1EBTT, Hollrltnr.

7 14, 21, SIS »•«.

SHKRim* SA1KIN niASCERT OP NEW JERSEY —

twi-pn HUOSEVBLT BUII.DINH ANDLOAN AHSdCIATION. « rnrporatlcvtl.CoTiipl»lnanl. unii VINCENT PUWllS-KOWSK1 Rild FRANrFR l>z\vr)NKi<W-SKI, h!ii *lf«, DPfHiflantn. P"I. FB. fur Hie

of mortnlinwrt pr*.rn1s"»> ilflltni .l in*1

it, l i l tTly vlrtHp of thp abovp vtatprt writ tn , l u .rPclpd »nd ilpllvprpn. I will pipoRft (0 mi^

At puMI^ vrnrlup f»nWRDNBBT)Ar. THE SECOND DAY nj

AI1UU8T. A. D, N1NKTBBN HUNDHEnTllltll'K-THHBB

Bt. tfffi o'nliwk D*yllRht Rftvlnj Tlmi* inthe afternoon nf Hi* nalil day »l lli> HlinIffi Office In th* Clly of N>w Brunnttii'VN I.

All th« fnllowlnr Irarl or parfpl nf In mlj»n<l pTMTilHPs hprplnaftrr Dftrtlculnrly dr.•<Tlb«d, aKnatt, lying »lfd b«lng In lh« Hurnuih of Cartsrat In the Comty nf Mlililu« « and, St t t* or Now Jtvny.

WHFCH on a map pntltlni "M»(> ur At.thllr Kill Tract, RnoMVolt, MldillMiPt i•„N. J., owned br 3. Bfelnberf," dated j u l l »17, 1)11, and made,by Fr«il T. Hlmunn, rR., UooMtvelt, N J., anil which map li:,v\w*n duly rilprt In th< Offl<-« of thn )> , ] .(If thp, Dounty of MI(!dlp»M al New nnnuwlrk. N. . 1 . Are lalrt down, known nn-tphown an l.ota Numbprn «2 nnd fl^, n,.flamn frontintt and facing on Frlr<lr> Btr*./1nfl shown t*\ RBlil map nml I^IPK pn.'i : ,fp*t front nnd rpar and «0 f««t In <J<»|»th

Ilr*»ml»p« now known an No. 11 PIINM,.,!,atrppt, Cdrterpt. Nnw Jrney.

Tho approximate «m*>iint of thrt <l*r^nn . „UP- natlnflfd hy laid naif 1* the mini nf <WThnuiand Nlnn Hnndrrd ttlgnty-tilirht T>ollar« and Thlrty-cmn C»nlll | | l .9>t . l l >, i,,gpihor with thn rnfttH nf thlt RAIP.

Tn«pllipr ••Ith all and ulnRular Ihp rights.,prlvlloKpft. hrrPilllamfflU* Bntl AppurtPHiin<es thirciintn hplnnglnu or In anywlft* np-lifrtaHiInK

Rhi-rKfKMir. KT1 ? % (i ?

C V. 7 - 7 , H ,

A l1 1 , A 1 " ,

si. n.

,AK H. El

Hollrltor.

• V

Unique Race of Giants! Found in Dry Cavern

Lo* Angslei,—An unique race ofgiant Mongolian t n » people—Blaoteyet and tmall feet—lWed 6,0()0-yearsor more ago In northwestern Meilco,aocordlug to Paison 0. Hayes, wliodlicovered well preserved fiiummleHof the nici In dry caves In the region.

Hayes brought buck evidence of acivllliatlon which may compel arcln--ologlstj to revise theories of the oilflu of the American Indian.

Hayta BIKMI! fnur yuai'l tlnillllK »n<1excavatiog 34 mumuileii fruhi one ofthe caves.

Very few tooln or ltnplenieuta werefound, although Indians usually buryman; of theee to be used by the deadIn the "Happy JIunMng Ground."

Transients IncreasingFast, Survey Reveal*

St Louis—America's transient pop-ulation Is Increasing at an alarmingrate, a survey by «G. M. Cwtnner, di-rector of the St. I-ouis bureau of home-less men, Indicates.

Gwlrmer estimates that there nrsmore than fiOO.OOO men and boys drift-

. . . i l l . * u ~ n p i ' P m l i p r S, U S ! , M » p 517 a s n h o w n

of the company as required by the 1] |a(.k unttt n> n n ( l b y l 0 ( a n u m l r t r , , w H v ( ,l f N J b

ug about the country.more than -200,000 are

Ofboys

thes*,under

twenty years-of aga. he believes.Trains cnmlng Into St. Louis dally

bring between 2,000 and 3,200 unin-vited guests, the survey, made'In co-

d f f i i l

of New Jersey.All surety agreements must be in

proper form and must be acknowl-edged in the usual manner.

The Board of Education reservesthe right to reject any und all bids,and further reserves the right to re-ect any successful bidder, becausehe Board in its judgment feels that

the surety company does not meethe proper financial requirements.

Board of Education, Borough fCarteret, County of Middlesex,State of New Jersey.

WILLIAM V. COUGHUN

operation railroad officialspa

showed. Most of these move on in aday or two, Gwlnner said.

World's Largest RabbitIs Owned in California

QUroy, Calif—Ttie largest rabbit Inthe world Is believ.l to be GilroyQueen, a prlie-winniiw FlemiBh giant,owned by Jess Uliodes. Gilroy rabbitraiser. She f» *leven months old,weighs 23'A pounds and has not yetattained her full growth.

The huge white rabbit, which meas-ures 27^4 inches long, Is the largest of.more than 10,000 rabbits registeredwith the American Kabblt Breeders'association, and Is believed -to be thelargest ever grown.

Cferk.C. P. 744.

BIIEKIFF'9 SALES CHANCEBY OP NEW JEltijEY — Be-tw-eon 1-KBD J. CUX, »nd HOY 0.EVAKT3, Surviving Trustees, LomylHliii-unt. and SOPHIE 1). Hl.MONS and FUKU-G1I1CK P. SIMONS, htr hualiaud, UKfuil-untK. FI. Fa. tor lilt" snlo 1)1 mortgaKnl

ri'niiscB ilm#d June .10. 1&33.llj vlrnis of Hie nlxivc klulnl writ, 1(1 me

liift-tod anJ Uelivertd, I will e\putn; LuHiik; ut |wljli<: vendue utiWEUSEHDAV. THE NINTH HAY UKAUGUST, A. D., NINETEEN HUNDHBD

AND TH1HTY-THKEEat twii o'clock Dayllsht Sftvlng Time inthe afurnfjon of the auld day ut the .Slur-lffs Uftlte In Ulff City of New UrUnswtiU,N. J.

All the following trait or Harci'l nf laii'land premises hereina.ftcr purtk-uliniy i\e~

d b i i th !!

I u s win! fourteen (14) on block numbertwo (2) and the most easterly Blx ln<:heflof lot No. 10 and described R» follows:

BECINNINO at u. slake ululated In theiinrthprly line of Fttrh atreet. distant onehundred twenty-four and five tenthH < 124. fi Ifi-et from the Intersection of wild line (if

WE'RE THE EXCLUSIVE AGENTS FOR

RARCO POCAHONTAS COALIF YOU WANT THE GENUINE CALL US TODAY AS

OUR PRICES ARE SPECIALLY REDUCED

RARCO NUT COAL $7.75RARCO STOVE COAL $8.25

ALL RARCO POCAHONTAS IS DUSTLESS TREATED

THE ONLY GRNIIINF, POCAHONTAS ON THE MAR-KET—DON'T UK MLSI.MI) BY SUBSTITUTES-A CER-

TIFICATE OF IDENTIFICATION ACCOMPANIESEACH LOAD FOK YOUlt PROTECTION.

WE HANDLE

Koppers Oven CokeSTOVE^ or CHESTNUT

Per Ton Delivered 1 0 7 5

RARITAN C O A L a n dCHARCOAL CO.

PHONE P. A. 4-2015AMBOYPERTH

YARD ANDOFFICE

SO. 2ND ST.

YOUR WANTS CLASSIFIEDRATE: 5 CENTS PER LINE

, Hltuate, lying being in the !!«•f dllough of Carteret In tile. Culinty .'( Vllilillf

aei anil State of New Jeisey.HBOINNINLT a t ' a corner formed by tlH'

Intersection of the northerly Bide of lllii/.-Ing Star Road (now wuhlnKton a\euueiwith the easterly Bide of EmerHiin Hli>ct,fprnvtng the northeast corner of these twostreets, as shown on map of pro&my ofCarteret Kealty Co., U02"; turner i l l east-erly along the northerly side of Uluil"KStar Road (now1 Washington avenue! thirty(30) rest to a point; thence U) northerly

Woodin Pal> WithNewspaper Writers

By WILLIAM L. BRUCKARTWashington.—I)«i|>lte Die • train

of bank holiday* finding nay a tofinance bllllous of dollar* of publk'Mpeudlturta itnd touobee o^ grlyiie,William 11 Woudlu rontlmjen tomaintain lila artubllltj at secretaryof the tiftisuiy, l ie has becomemuch attached to the curl)* of

have to keep In tuucli with treas-ury adalra, and It umy tnt aililedthe writers havti giown visry [uudof the lecretaiy. They wera not(jUlte preiiared, Uowovcr, for the•ticrettiry to pay them u vialt Inthe room asuigued to thu curre•poudeuU, an he did the otlier day,la order to hold hln regular ilreaaconference

Dating tlie bank UolLday whuuth« corre»ooudi;iiU wore on thejob until two of tbreo o'vlurk «avhmorning, awaltlUK treuaurji. action,Mr. Woodin strolled Into tholrquarter* (or a chat. The hour wan•boot two o'clock, but the »i'ore^»ry thqugbt nothlnj of tlttt time.He n i concdrned Imuiwllateiy witht^« wreck* at d«akf, f bairn andtjp»writ*r» that w r t j d th« eorre•poiMteqU, mnd mn©u»c»d that bettcr equipment wan needed. He or-dfNd It twilled. So the urew'room wnt fatim eottftoteli withDfw fum«M» m m Irtt time mSO jenrtv M# t»» mm*f null"1

to «fte ho* it looked »< '

Sprint ChampionshipsAt Nutley Velodrome

Competition For United State;Crown Will Get Under WaSunday Night — Fine Card

Frank 1,. Kramet, chairman of i\Bourd of I'onlrol uf tltu Nitlionul Cy-cling Association, lias announcedthat coni|iutitinn for tlu: sprint- cliain-[lionahip uf Hit1 United iitat&i would

underway Sunday iiiuht at theNutley Velodrome with the runninguf the quarter mile chanipionHhinrace, the first of a series uf nix liav.s

o decide the title. The distances ofthe other races will be one thirdmile, one half-mile, onei mile, twomiles and live miles. Cecil Walker,Australia, ih the present holder ofthe sprint title ami has held thehumpiuiiiihip for the past three

years, but the hike fans figure hewill have u totiglt job winning thetitle this season.

Walkur'i outstanding contendersfor the title ure Hill iloiieinaii, crackAmerican sprinter, who has triumph-ed in Europe for the lust couple ofyears; Freddie Spencer, thrice sprintchampion of America; Norman Hill,California youth, who ha» beencleaning up in nil sorts of competi-tion; E<1 Raffo, popular and speedyItalian sprinter; Charley Ritter,Newurk boy; George Dempsey andHarris llorder, of Australia andTon; Saottu and Joe I)e Vito, speedyItalian riders. The quarter milechampiomshrp Sunday night will fa-vor the fast starters.

mated at $10,000,000.

Europe's Lonfcst Br!d|«Copenhagen.—Construction has start-

ed on the longest combined rail and dlKl' parallel with Emerson street one hun-road bridge In Europe running two a -> < « « < - t - ^ ^ • . . ' . ' • • ^ " J . - . ' i " ,miles between the Damali lBlauus 01 s t 4 r I{u(L(i (n o w Washington I V M M I thir-

a n d Z e e l a m l . T h e COBt la e S t l - 1V <30> f ee t t o a point In the easterlyi HideU f E m e m o n s t r e e t ; t h e n c e ( 4 ) s o u t h e r l y ,I along the easterly shlt< of Emerson street,|one hundred IIMI fe.tt to the point or

place uf BEG1NNINU.BRINd lot No. 2ti uiul the moMt wester-

ly five (SI feet or Lot No. 27. as shown

DUTTEl> AND HOUNDED n» follows:On the south by Blaitng Hlar Hogd (nowWashington avenue!; on the east by theremaining portlun o( I.nt No. 21; on thenorth by Lot No. MS ami on the west byIJniergon Htreet, as shuwn On said map.

Italug tike premises communly known anddesignated an Slid. 16 WashingtonL'yrleret, N. J.

The approximate amount of the decreeto IK'. BUlUfied tiy said sale 1» the sun) of

WANTED — Small Farms; in andaround Woodbridge Township. A.

H. De Young, Avenel, N. J.W. I. 2-1.0 tf.

Goat Leadt Sheepto Execution Room

t'ort Worlh, Texas. —Tom, • 226-pound (oU, probably D M led moreuallltouj to death than nay otherexecutioner In history.

Tom U chief cf Uie »he«p lead-lug squad at a packlu* plant hamWhen a, new batch of mutton laneeded, he U turued Into tbasheep pens.

He preattt* bis w»y Uirou*b theAovk to « uair.ww, twhrtlng ruBway that leads to the exucatloDroom. The sheep follow him toto the »lttO([titer room. Tuerti Tuui«add«uly torui and de*c*ud» th«U\o$ chuta—Alone.

for three years Tom haa beenU p Judas of baudreds of Hocki.

Bosiy'i Brew AboveLimit, Owner Find*

Geneva, Ohio.—Capt. 1. D. How-ard, North Geneva farmer, stillhopes he will not flnd Molly, MBfnvorlte cow. wearing four gov-ernment mullocks some morning.

Several tlityu ago, Molly got holdof some damp wheat Hint hadsoured.

"Molly Is a fool cow, like all mu-ley eowa," sulil Captain Howard."So, of course, she ate nil thewheat she could hold. The nextmorning when 1 milked, the foamoverran the bucket aud Houked myknees. Molly had turned herselfInto a brewery and far exceededthe legal 8.2 deer."

Klevt-u 'I'luiusaml Bight Hundred ElevenDollois nild Sixteen Cents (111,111.11), tu-

uiliui nlth the 1'ontd of tills sale.'IMgt'tlier with all and singular the rights,

prlvllei

tulnlng.

hert<Htainentjs and appurtenanc-belunijlng ur tit . ayper-

Al.AN H. ELY, Sheriff,JOHN li. TUO1.AN,».i(.u Solicitor.I.', 1'. 1-li, 21. 28.1 >H.

Haifkt of Pinou TrMThe plnon tree attains a height of 10

to 35 feet, or more, and • diameter of12 to 90 Inches. It U a desert-IoothiUtre« occurring on mesas and mountainslope* and sides of canyons at «l*vaUOIM between 6,00(1 and 0.000 (eat

SEALED PROPOSALSSEALED HKOPOSAJLS will be re-

ceived by, the Board of Education ofthe Borough of Carteret, County ofMiddlesex, State of New Jersey, atits meeting to be held at the Carter-et High School, ou the 21th day ofJuly, 1933, at 8 p. m., Daylight Sav-ing Tim*, for alterationa to the pres-ent toilet rooms of the polumbuxSchool and the W«*himfton School.

All work to be done in accord-ance with the and aueeiflca-

IN CHANCEKV o r NEW JKH8EY — BeI ween DANIEL O. CHASE, Complainant,and LEO HOCKUAN. and MAM1KUOCKMAN. Ills wife, el, als.. Defendants.

Kl. Fa. fur sale of mortgaged premises *latetl June 2H, 1U33,

by vlrtL*] u|f the above staled writ to medlrm'led and delivered, I wtll expuse lo sale

WKD.N'ESUAV, TUB NINTH DAY OFAUGUST. A, O.. 1D33

ut two u'clock daylight sa.vlfig time In tt)afternoon of the suld day at tile Hlicillf(Jffl.-o In the City uf New Brunswick, N, I

All that following tract or parcel ut Iananil premises hereinafter particularly dscribed. Blluatn, lying uud being In the Bor-ough of I'trlg/et, In tli« County of Middle

% and Stain of New Jereey.Being known, numbered unll deslgnut

as lots HIM. eleven (11) und thirteen (13)111 block No, two ci) on a. map e-inltlttl,-"Map of Hulldtn, l.ott. l.itild 11 Colwell,In Cartertl. Mlikllesm Cuuuty, N J . »urveyed by Louis Quln. mUabeth, N. J. filedAugust !(. 1182 at. map 217 In the riurk'sOlfloe of Mtddlesei luunty

HcXilNMNU st u 'stako plunte'l In Hie•outh«r!y line of Kuuaeveli avenue (foiinen-ly knuwu as the Union l.^itdliiK l(oud) die ,

-flv.; (I2&) ftelf said uvenue In

uf u l JIVnlili.lII street) fu til'

•aid inu|); Iheucu

All transient ads are payable inadvance. Adi will bo figured t>ythe actual number of LINES thecopy lakes, irrespective of ihenumber of words. In estimatingthe cost of ad in advance allowFIVE average words to the line.Figure NINE lines to the inch.

Minimum ad accepted FIVElines.

No ad accepted (or lest than3? centi.

For ads cancelled b«fore thenumber of iniertiont originallyordered a REFUND will be madeexcept in cases where contract!h»ve been signed.CLASSIFIED ADS ACCEPTED

UNTIL10 A. M.

FRIDAY MORNING tor publica-tion the same day.

AUTOMOBILE PAINTING

CARS PAINTED — $12.00 COM-plctc job. Trucks $15.00 and up.

Cars called for and delivered. StateGarage, Superhighway No, 25, 43 Ed-FOR SALE or RENT

RESTAURANT and LUNCH ROOM gar road, Rahway. Phone 7-0244.for sale or rent. Good loco-; W. I. 7-28*

tion on super-highway, Avenel, Allnew equipment. $200 a week busi-ness, can be increased. Box K,Woodbriiltfe Independent.

WANTED

MALE HELP WANTEDWIDE-AWAKE, experienced sales

men wanted who are willing towork on a proposition in which thereis money for a hustler. If you ar«not a plugger do not waate our timeor yours. Call at Woodbridge Independent, 18 Giuen Stieel at one o'clock Saturday.

FURNISHED Apartment. Inquln650 Maple avenue, Woudbridire

W. I. 6-9 tf.

SEASHORE COTTAGE FOR RENTHas dining room, 2 bedrooms, livingroom, laundry and nice cool veran-da. Is completely furnished. Reasonable rent. Apply James McCollum12!) Irving street, Kaliway. PhomRailway 7 1245.

FOB RENT — Five and six roomhouse*. All improvement*. Prom

$20 up. De Young, Avenel. PhoMWoodbridge 8-12204.W. I. 3-10 tf.

tiona prepared for the same by V.F. Simoub, C. E., 645 Roosevelt avo-nu«, Carteret, N. J.

AU proposal* must be actompan-.Ki in wriluujf by an a«ieeni«iit of a

surety company authorized to trans-act butlaetu in th« State of New J»f-a«y. The naid ajtreewent on tha p«rtof the surety company shall contain.th# usual covenuiU to axecute andlieliver the bond , r^utred.by th«plans ttttd sjXKl&eatiooa within tondays after tile contractor hua rwceiv-«4 notice that he is the aucueasfulbidd«r, aju) teHiMT n»id

taut ulle hundredlueaaured uUiug Huld linean eaaterly dlrectlun fiojof the said aoulliei ly 111wllb the eaaturly line oliformerly known us Colvsailla ale laid duwn onruunlftg hi a southerly dLrmtUin al rightangles with the auhl Hue of said Hoosevelt• venue on liundrsU (1(1(11 feel to a stake; 76 Main St .Uttinoe ruunlnf «a«terly mid .parallel withaald line of said avenue, rifty l i t ) tert loa «t*k« planted; thaueo runntug northerly!aitll parallel tu IU« ftrat couraa one hundred(100) fmt tu t in afarasald Una o( said ave-nu»; wostorly «1<MI« th« sums riflr

l U l N I N; y « u

l6») te«t to ilu lilac* at UiculNNINGBin t f th l UBeing

ei til 1

lth« p y

niMii by a««d »r l.oub l.uvt |

data Much 6, mill ami mcurdm! in Mid*MMr t;Ui*p. uttlv. .

fur Klrst Tract sjuuuii|« tu al>-l |V • !

and

pr»i|nia».lyAll tbiMa certain lots, trai-tai or liaixelu

ut land. sltHalv. lying and being lu trieBuiough of darteivit. In the County uf M14-dlojMi» aJ4 SUkie "f N*w Jersey:

Is, l , lui . B.Woodbridiw, N,

FOR RENT560 Maple Avenue

ti rooms and bath, large livingroom, steam heat, garage, rent,S45.

J. H. ConcannonReal ErtaU

Tel. 8-026!

FOR 8ALE—Fl»e room boose withbath and sJHinprovemenU in Row-

8—17

HOUSE FOB 8ALB — 6 room* andhath; all improvwuanU;rch acma* and ftwnjiags.^ f c M f f g d d t

i. 6-y tf.

FARMS — Belonginj ToFEDERAL LAND BANK OF

SPRINGFIELD, acquired by fore-losure, FOR SALE, OH RENT. Willte sqld for part cash, and balancenanced by long term first and sec-nd mortgages. For particulars, in-luire of George J. Plechner, Nation-

al Bank of New Jersey Building, NewBrunswick, N. J.

BUSINESSDIRECTORY

MOVING and STORAGEMOVING AND STORAGE—Prompt

service and careful handling. Jas.Ic Collum, Inc., 129 Irving street,

Rahway. Phone Rahway 7-1246.

BATTERY SERVICE

DALTON'S AUTO ELECTRIC AND,Battery servic*. Greneral autxy

motive repairing. We specialize ingenerators and starters. Also Stfom-berg carburators. 742 State street,Perth Amboy. Phone 4-1815.7-21-33*

LOCKSMITHS ""D. DEKOFF, LOCKSM1TH-GUN-

smith, general repairing, safesopened and repaired and combina-tions changed. Ice skate* sharp-ened, saws filed. 154 New Bruna-wick avenue, Perth Amboy.4-2222.

Phonetf

RESTAURANTSMEET ME AT RAY'S HUT, Dining

Room service, Toasted Sandwichesand good Beer. On Super-highwayat Clover Leaf, Avenel. TeLbridge 8-1798.

FRANK'S PINE TREE INN ANI>Restaurant, Rahway avenue, Ave-

nel. Orchestra for dancing Wednes-day ami Saturday evening. Refresh-ments, Spaghetti. Tables for ladies.No cover charge.W. I. 6-30 tf.

R*nt and lunch rooms. Gauelectrif and city water; reason-able. Frank Prieas, super-highway^5, corner Spring street, Bonham-town, N. J.

TRADE FOR USED CARWILL TRADE two city lots in Fords

for good used car. Write, givingyear and mak*> of car to Box COWoodbridge IndependentW. I. 3-10.

MACKMTS SEJRVItB BTATION—On Super Highway No. 26, Ave-

nel. "Standard Accounts AcceptedHere." Open day and night.Standard agent. Phone Woodbrfdg«8-1549.W. I. 6-23, 80; 7-7, 14*

CAHTERETr^OTOR~SBRv"lCE~Automotive repairing - welding -

gasolines . oils - accessories. Radio*installed in any make car. ROOM-yelt avenue between Cartewt andRahway. Phone Carteret 1657.

g op, 7and heels,

seetLadies'

LAFAYETTE GARAGE — AUTOiwjrvicti to the minute, General

auto repairing. Day and nightwrecker servieti. Gasolines, oils, ac-cewtoriaH, storage. Paul Popovitch,Prop. Supur-Highway 26, Wood-bridge Township. Itotuchen, N. J.Phone Mat. *4)»4«W. I. 7-28-83*

CATERING[ N E B - C O R N E R OF

bway Route 26 and

SPEEDOMETERSSPEBDOMBTEa fi

:U)VER LEAF INN—A cool placeto enjoy. Beer on tap, spaghetti,

li(rlit lunch, oti;. Free use of Hall fofparties or meetings. Super highwayoff Clover Leaf. Phone Woodbridge

W.'l. 7-7tf. - •

The MAPLE TREE BEER GARDENDINING - DANCING

ORCHESTRA SATURDAY NIGHTSPicnic Grounds to hire for large

PartiesRahwuy Avenue Avenel, N. J,

Phone Rahway 7-1576W- I- 7-14, 21, 28; 8-4*

SAW FILINGN. CHR. HANSEN — ALL KINDS

of saw filing by machine. Re-toothing or change of teeth. Gen-eral machinist. Sewing machine*repaired. Raiors sharpened, too.grinding, scissors ground, 146 Fay-etU street, Perth Amboy.W. I. 7-2S-88*

SHOE REPAIRINGIP YOU WANT economy and wB-

able work, call at Ideal Shew Re-pairing shop, 77 Main street ¥*•»'•BOIM and h l | i f o d i h l

TRUCKING, local or long diitanct;two trucks at your eonvenUncfc

Phone Woodbndcs 108, John 1%o»-ts, Oakland avenue, 8 m t m .

Page 5: Thi «v«rywhtre—Pay no mow KdsMcslnside CARTERE Carter ... · SBm Jim and Kelly ^e ^rice °* Thi ^P*s 1 is & centfl «v«rywhtre—Pay no mow KdsMcslnside CARTERECarter* BwMrfi

OARTER&T PRESS FRIDAY, JULY 14,1933 PAGE flVI

Lea: RaceCorky fives 5 Hits,

Americans TriumphCorky Pitches) Americans To

Great 2-1 Victory Over P. A.Hungarians.

Corky Andres pitched the Ameri-cans 1o n ^rwit 2 to 1 triumph overIIM- Hun^ni-ians A. <;. of Perth Am-luiy "'• L«€*ibi4f'« field Sunday after-noon. He held tho Hungarians to fiveFiittt.cro.d hits and struck nut sixteenbutters. Ho hud line contTol, too, is-litiintr only nnp pnns to flint.

The game developed Into a keenpitchers' duel between Andres and/iPfian. After the Hungarians hadM'ortMl a run in the third to break1he ice, the Americans came back inthe same inning to score two runsand win the game. Possoby led offwith a single, He -went to second onun infield out and scored when Ila-koai slammed a double into deep cen-ter. Then Rudy (inlvanck stepped upto the plate, picked out one he liked,nnd drove it for a three-bagger towore Rakosi with what later provedto be the winning run.

Rakosi led the attack by gettingthree: hits in four chances.

American! (2)AB

Rakosi, If 4(ialvanek, 3b 4Mullen, w 4Rose, c 4Zysk, cf '.'.. 4S k k 2b 4

y ,Siekerka, 2bCombs, 1bPossoby, rfAndres, p

4143

82

R100000010

SPertli Amboy Hungarian* (1)AB R

Drevetz, 3b 4 0Horvatch, rf 4 0Dagonya, as 8 0Stumpf, lb 4 0Zegan, p 4 0Glain, If 3 0Vargo, cf .. 4 0Matis, 2b 8 0Anderko, c 3 1

iTERSOl

32 1 5The score by innings;

Hungarians 001 000 000—1Americans 002 000 OOx—2

Defeat Macks, 5 - 4 And CrushCardinals, 8-1 To Gain Lead

fwm Coach«d Jointly By Hughie Skanley And Buster BellShowing C U M In Second Half Rac« In Cartwet TwilightLeague—Paatry Boyt Drop Second Straight La*t Night,Loving To Mack*, 9-7.

The Nut Club, which finished in last place in the first half,ose to the pole position in the Twilight League second half

race as a result of two brilliant victoria* this pant week. LastFriday, in a replay of H tic«anic, the forces led jointly byHughie Shanloy and Husior Hell, bent the Macks, 5 to 4, andon TueAday, they handed the Cnrdinnla a neat lacinff, 8 to 1, torecord their second Hlniijrht triumph, l^ist night the Pa«tryBoys, first half winners, dropped their second game in a rowin the uecoiid half, hming to the Macks, 9-7.

Takes Feature Race In Much Wins, 10-1Season's Fastest Time;

Beats Galaxy Of StarsNearly Breaks Half And 5-Mile Records

Johnny Hannon, daring Conshohocken, Pa. pilot who hasbeer* consistently stealing the show, from the cream of the At-

, lantic seaboard racing crop, scored his fourth major victory atthe Woodbridge spuetlway, Sunday afternoon, when he won thetwenty-five mile feature in 24 minutes, 35 2-5 seconds, fromthe classiest field entered this season. Hannon's brilliant riding[n the fifty-lap final climaxed an afternoon which saw him baskcontinually in the spotlight. Turning the half-mile in 21 4-5

iconds, he came, within two-fifths of a second of tying the ex-ting track record held by Joe Russo. He then won the first

...Ce-mile qualifying heat in 4 minutes 44 1-5 seconds, the Tast-iest time for that distance this year and only two and one-fifthJseconds behind Joe Russo's record for five miles. Hannon'sIt ime for twenty-five miles was also the fastest foe the fifty lapsI this year. Approximately 8,000, the largest crowd of the 1933|Season, saw the races.

Hannon Driwt PoleHannon, on a Miller, started at

Takes League LeadCarteret Team Beats New

York To Avenge Early Sea-son Setback and Climb IntoFirst Place—Frank Poll In-vincible.

Frame Has Yen To Blow Exhaust InFaces Of Messrs. Sail And Hannon

'Gentleman Fred" Frame, 1932 Indianapolis Winner, ClaimsHe'll Beat Popular Pair Of Pilots Sunday Or Make ThemBreak Every Record For Speed To Keep Ahead Of Him

— Expect Big List Of Entrants.

i pole but lost the lead to Bob Sail,irson, coming out of the west

.. The field strung out with Joeso, Indianapolis, third, and Pat-

ron, Unn, Orenduff, Mackenzie,hn, Tabor and Drexler trailing in

J t order..Sal) and Hannon battled side byle at times but the eleventh lapnnd the Jersey boy out front stillOwing exhaust in Hannon's direc-,in. Tee Linn moved up to fourth

the ninth lap and was third two_JB later with ''Doc" Mackenzie bat-

. Jmg him for the position. Joe Russo,(who was experiencing trouble with a[nigh-gear ratio, dropped back to fifth

I The tenth lap sent two of the mostI dangerous threats, Jimmy Pattersonland "Shorty" Drexler, to the pits.ff Drexler threw a right rear wheel inE'the east turn but kept the car underI •control and ''dragged" into his pit

f Patterson cut down into the same\ turn too sharply, went into a spin

and Bmacked the inside guard rail•head-on, disabling the Green KnK-< meeting job he waa piloting. Patter-;son was riding third at the time of[his mishap.

In the meantime, Hannon, giving' Sail a battle that kept the funs ontheir feet during the entire race, waadoing his beat to head the pack. Thebreak came on the nineteenth lapwhen Hannon idiot by Sal! on the

; west turn. On the next lap, the Penn-sylvanian lapped the field and hadcovered the ten miles in the fasttime of 0 minutes 40 seconds. Hewas not headed after that, ibut stead-ily drew away from Sail to win bya halt-lap.

Sail placed secondl ahead of "Doc. Mackentie, Bob Hahn and Joe Rus-• ao who flnUhed in that order. There'were no serious accidents.

Hannon Take* Clwo OneThe fjwt five-mile qualifying heat,

the closest, most-bitterly fought racerun this season, was won by Hannonin 4:44 1-6 over a field consistingof Bob Sail, Joe Russo, Jim Patter-son, Fred • Frame and Tee Linn. Sailbaat Hannon Into the first turn totake the lead but loati it on the sec-ond Up. The Paterson boy was outfront again when Hannon skidded anthe third lap and from then on tharace settled into a ajda-by-Mde du«lbetween the two, the daring drivingsilencing the fans wh,p «u>ect«d atragedy to unfold before tnelr e-yesat any moment.

Lap after lap the two rode in amiout of turn* Bide by side, battlingnercaly to get out front, jlnally, ontho eighth citeuit, Hannon burned

duff dropped out on the fifth lap."Chuck" Tabor, who came up fromsixth to third place on the first lap,experienced motor trouble which didnot permit him to finish.

Starting in fourth position, Taborswept into the iead on the first lap,and after battling Bob Hahn all theway, won the third five-miler1 in 4:592-5. Tabor and Hahn rode side byside around the entire speedway on

Avenging ;in parly season setback,the Carteret Ji'dnota baseball tossersdefeated New York, No. Ifil, at NewYork last Sunday afternoon tu riseto first place in the Eastern .li-dnotaHase.ball League, replacing the NowYork representatives who have heldthe league lend since the beginningof the season. Tho score of this gamewas 10 to 1, New York averting ashutout by scoring nn unearned runin the ninth frame.

Mickey Miglecz, rotund figure onthe Jedtiota, baseball team, complete-ly subdued the New Yorkers. Hispitching wizardry completely baffledthe New Yorkers who were limitedto live hits, three of the scratch var-iety. Mickey fanned seven battersand gave only one free pass to first.ill' was master of the situation atall times.

The Carteret team collected four-teen hits, eight of which, weredoubles. They scored two runs in thethird, then drove Macko from thebox in tho tifth when they got fivemore runs to sew up the ball game.

Mickey D'zurilla and Mike Pollgot three hits each. Mickey smackedtwo doubles.

JEDNOTA LEAGUEStanding of the Leaden

W LCarteret 8 2Now York 161 4 2Trenton 1 2St. SUphent 5 2

The box score:Cartertt (10)

AB R HV. Poll, 2b 5 2 2Mazala, 3b 5 0 1Smolenski, SB 4 2 2W. D'zurilla, rf , 4 2 1M. D'zurilla, c 4 2 3M. Poll, cf 5 1 3Masculin, If 5 0 2J. D'zurllla, lb 8 1 0Miglecz, p ~ 4 0 0

40 10 14

Fred Frame, 11132 Indianapoliswinner and idol of rating fans in I lieboard track; days at Woodbridge, hassigned with Jack Curley to competeat the Woodbridge Speedway, Sun-day afternoon. Frame smarting un-der the defeat handed to him by HobSail and Johnny Hannon lure lastSunday is anxious to redeem himselfand promises his many followers thatic will show the kids some plain and

New York

Krai, 3b 5Kanaral, 2b, lb „.. 3Kmetss, cf .... 3Stasek, c, lb 4Adams, ss, 2b, P 4Dunko, If , 4Bob'bs, If 2Macko, p, ib 3Marasz, c 1Wolfe, rf, 2b . - 2Ilko, ss 1

R00100o00000

Juhnny Hannonthe ninth lap. Orenduffthird, Marion fourth andfifth.

Hut CoiuuUtion

finishedDiexler

The lead in the ten -mile consola-tion swung backthe IJgrind.

mid forth amongpilots throughout the entire

...» "Shorty" brtmler won Hitruce in 10:13 4-5 with Hob Kilf sec-ond and Sidney PershuuBe third.

Drexler swiped the lead from Igentlialer on the first lap but lostft on the second. Motor trouble sentZiegenthalHr to his pit on the elev-enth lap at which time U m l q r again

d d h k VMi»j» t h e i? s h o tenth lapheaded the pack.

l btinto thee puil

ck. Vbut only

d

lq g» t h e i ? s h o t

or a lap asinto the leuil but only for a pmittur tnuriile forced him out ofcompetition mi the thirteenth circuit.

Johnny Moretti jumped the guard

e ill sh t e k paney tricks about driving race cars. I hart.Frame seemed to be going places in

he first live mile sprint Sunday androrked himself up from sixth posi-on to fourth. He was just about to

ake third place when the steeringpparatus on his car went wrong

car a complete overhauling and hismany supporters hope to see himgive the stars much trouble July 16.

The Woodbridge Championshipstanding still shows Johnny Hannonin the k'ild with 384 points. Bob Sail StuUke, cis second with 270 and Bob Hahn' F. Poll, ssthird with 177. They are followed Skocypec, cf .by Ira Hall, Sidney Pershouse, Tee; R. Galvanek, IfLinn, Milt Marion, Jimmy Patter-.Patocnig, rf ...son, Malcolm Fox and Lloyd Bros- Morris, rf

Nut Cluh 5 Macki 4The Nut Club ennm from behind

o beat the Macks on R smashingrfple by 'King' Slutzke which ••rmi'ilNobby D'zurilla with the tying runind a sacrifice hurt 'by Frank Poll

which brought RtnUke in with whatproved to be the diyiding and win-ning rijn in as fine a game us hasbeen witnessed in the Twilight Lea-p ie played at the high school Heldlast Friday night. The sctire was 50 4. Tht> game was A replay of a ti»

gamp.The lead exchanged hands no less

han four times. The Nut^ lub hop-ped into the front by scoring a runm the first inning. Chappy Conrnilon base on an error, advanced tosecond on an infield out and scoredon Nobby D'zurilla'R ontvbase blow.

The Macks got two runs in thethird to take the upper hand. Threeb hulls featured this rally.The Macks did not reatain in Ovlead long however as Wrky Andrwled off with a double in the last halfof the third HIHI scored on Chap Conrad's single. This tied the score at2-2.

The Nut Club gut. another run inthe fourth to take the lead for thesecond time. But. the Macks oameback in th« fifth to score two runs onfour successive singles, and gain theupper hand once more, 4 to 3.

The; Nut Club was not to he out-done, however. Hughie Shanley'sboys rallied to scorn two runs in tliefifth and win a great game. With oneaway Nobby b'/.urilla walked. Stutz-ke. then hammered a triple into deepen te r , worinir P'/nrillit with the ty-ing run. Several moments laterStutzkc scored with the winning runon Frank Poll's sacrifice.

The game wan a tight pitchers'duel between Corky Andres and, Joe

|Teri'becki, two former high school1 Uvivlers. Teii'becki gave five hits,

Andres six. Andres struck out fourbatters, Terebecki three. Corky walk-ed live, Joe issued three passes tofirst.

Of the five Macks' hits, CharleySzeiatf and Bill Biesel got two upiece.

The box; score:Nut Club (5)

ABConrad, cf, If 3iSkurat, 3b 2

' J. D'zurilla, lb .".'•' .'..... 2821212

CARTERET TWILIGHT LEAGUETs*m Standing

wg

wL

0I12

N«« Club 2

Cardinal* 1Pattry Boy* O

R«ulU o< WwkNat Club B — Maclu 4

Nat Club a — Cardinal! 1Muki 0 — Pattry Boy. 7

Pel..000.600.500.000

Nul Club «The Nut Club

CartUaaU 1administered

crushing 8 to 1 defeat over the Car-d l h hi ld T

gdinuls at the school field Tues-day evening to climb into first plaoein the necnnd half Twilight I M ( « »race.

Frank Poll pitched brilliantly,yielding five hits of the scatteredvariety. His mates presented himwith it five run lend in the third inn-ing, increasing it tn m-ven runs in

1 the fourth. Aftei that \\t ju:it collatedHIHIIK lu ni/tniy.

The Nut Club hit bard, collectingtwelvo hits «nd driving Mike K»r-mon, stnrtinfr Cardinals pitcher. t»the showers in thiit. Mfc third inning1

outburst.Nut Club (ft)

ABThatcher, If 3Skurat. 3b 6Conrad, ss 4StuUko, c 3P. Poll, p 1R. Galvanek, cf 3Richey, 2b 4Morris, rf 3Skocypec, lb : 4

Cardinal, (1)SO

AB4132

''rame is spending all week tuningh d M i l l D b d

I Richey, 2b ".". 2The time trials, as usual, will start Andres, p 3

at one o'clock so that the regular —

R10110010001

H10110010001

Lukusiak, cf, p ....Hagen, cfCasey, 2bSmolenski, as .M Poll, cf, If 2Yap, 2b, 3b „. 2Bohanek, c 2Sickcrka, lib. V. 3Kosel, If, rf 2Hoodja, rf 1Clark, rf " 1Karmon, p 1

24 1 5The score by innings:

Nut Club 000 521 0—*Cardinal* 000 010 0—1

The summary: Two base hits,Thatcher, Stutzke, Morris. Threebase hits, Skocypec. Home runs, Kos-el.

R1110002I2

8

R000000001000

H2II101113

IiH20000«00IIt1

races can get under way between2;30 and 3 p. m. Despite the rainlast Sunday, one of the largestcrowds ever to attend an auto race Bylccki, 2b

Mackt (4)

•i'i IThe score by innings:

larteret 002 060 102—10New York lftl .... 000 000 001— 1

The summary: l > o paw hitsj F.Poll, Mayorek, W. D'zurilla, M. D'-zurilla 2, Smolenski, M. Poll, Mascu-lin. Struck out by Miglecz 7, ijaseson balls off Miglecs, 1. Umpire, JoeMakoski.

is s p e gp his speedy Miller-Djiesenberg and

,vhen he lets 'er go, Hunnon, Sailnd the other Eastern speed kingsad better clear out of the way. Ateast, that's what Frame says. "They-'re great race drivers", says Frame,'but I'll have my car ready for them>n Sunday and I've discovered somehings about the Woodbridge track

didn't know before. You can justsay that I'll beat them this Sunday—or make all of them break everyecord for speed. I used to like theId board track at Woodbridge but

the speedway Jack Curley has thereow is o. k. and what I used to do

jn the wooden bowl can be done on;his hard surface track. Watch me;his Sunday."

That's a lot of talking for Frame^but Fred didn't like the way Han-

non and Sail rode around him laatSunday. He finished fourth in thefirst sprint—one of the most thrill-ing and sensational buttles ever stag-ed on an autt> truck with Hannonand Sail driving like mad to estab-ish a new murk—4.44 1-6. Joe Rus-

so, another Indianapolis star, didfairly Well against the Eastern stars.He won the second R mile sprint butcould do no better than fifth in thebij[ race. Joe wants to make someadjustments on his Indianapolis carand also believes that he can "take"the whole field.

Entries for Jack Curley's secondAuto Speed Classic to be stagedSunday afternoon, are coming \nrapidly and indications point to an-other field that will include the lead-ing drivers of the nation, d i e t Gard-ner, who finished fourth in thisyear's Indianapolis, is dickering withJack Curley and this speed demonmay be added to the field Sundayafternoon.

Much is expected from Henry Z\fgenthaler, the Dayton, Ohio, boy oiSunday. Ziegenthaler has been running into all kinds of motor troubles

nd had one of the sprints practi:ally won last Sunday when he was'orced into the pits. He is giving his

in the East crowded the Woodbridgestands and witnessed the most thrill-ing races in years. With Fred Fram*battling to redeem himself againstsuch speed demons as Hannon, Sail,Hall and a long list of others, autorace fans look for the second Cur-ley Clussic to bring out a recordbreaking; crowd on Sunday.

23

AB4

Mitroka, ss ,».,. 4C. Szelag, gbBieseJ, lbJ. Szelag, cf 4Biegert, rf .......F. Macks, rf " . . .Trosko, cA. Galvanek, If'.J. Terebecki, p .

Kosel Gives 5 HitsBut AD Stars Lose

Carteret Team Drops CloseGame To Jametburg F. C.—Score 6 to 4.

Despite a brilliant pitching per-ormancu by Stanley Kosel, who is•apidly becoming one of Carteret'i>>utstatiding hurltirsi, the Carteret Allitars dropped a G to 4 decision toho Jamesburg Kield Club at James-mg last Friday evening.

Koael pitched a line game, yielding>nly live hit*. H« easily had the bestf the argument with Hetty, Jumes-urg pitcher, who was nicked foright hits.

For Carteret Curley Sullivon, Lu-kuaiak and Prank Yap each got twoliits.

The box score:Carleret All Start (4)

AB RLukasiuk, If 5Yap, ss 5D'zurilta, c 3Sabo, ilb 4H. Sullivan, lb , rf 4J, Sullivan, cfMiglecz, 2bKara, rf

b

To Jolly t o . Old BoyLike to pleate a middle-aged man?

Address him: "Young man."

rail in the west tain -in the sixth lap.On 'thtTatvent'i&ith circuit,, WaltKeiper scattered cameramen whenh h l f dKeiper scattered cameramen whe half-hurdled the- inuida guard r«>>in the east turn. Neither driver wasInjured.

the Miller to the front but few took.the checkered flag a g W few feet Carter* Jednota Pl*ylAtad of gall. Pftttenon ftninh«dthird, Frame, fourth.

Jo* Russo won tha aeeout ftve-miler tn 4:56 2-S with Unn »eoond, Mackenzie third aid Be* Hahn

At f wth AmboyBetting in first plate in the East-

Jttdn»ta Baseball

First Child BaptiswlTut) first child to be btpttmed In thll

couutry was Vlrglula Dare In 1B8T.

their impreaslve victoryover N«W York, the CarttjWrM,s«rt»ti*eiS will ffideayor «a/iw»f

m*st-8iv

Frail PuUurlrtd MDrtod fruit*, like (We* ««»

•to*, maj be paiteurlwd e«ecti»el?• id thai fr«d from lu»e«t» and pitb-ojtnle batterl*. Ait«r being patfeui*Iwd the fruit remain* fresh and whole-tome for t long tiw*.

D«T*1»IM C«Uu«Beaton nnlvmlty claim* the world

for turning oui potential cot

vm

Carters A«ea Shut OutRockne* By 8-0 Score

The (jarteret Acen shut out thtockne A. C. over the week-end, 8o 0, behind a brilliant two-hit yitvh-ng performance by Bill Hagen.

The score by innfiWH;B. H

Aces 410 111 000—8 1Rocknes ..., (MM) 000 00«—0

0: l

3l2

R011000

; 0011,

26The score by innings:

Macks _ 002 020 0—4Nut Club , - 101 120 x—6

All Stars Score 3ln9thToWinll)-7

Stanley Ko»el Hurl* BrilliantGame A* All Start Beat Le-highs At City Stadium—Er-nie Sabo Hit» Homer.

Joe Hedwick DropsIn Hitting To .293

Cardinals, Too, In Slump,Dropping To Third Place InNational League Race.

The St. Louis Cardinals droppedto third place in the National Leaguerace and Joe Medwick, Carteret'ilone representative in the majors,likewise dropped in his batting av-erage. The husky Carteret leaguerlost eight points this week, droppingfrom jJMl last Friday to..293 this 'morfttng.

However, .lop turned in severalfielding gems for the Cards thinweek, twice saving the game for St»Louis with spectacular runningcatches.

Comba, lbKosel, p

The Carteret All Starsthree runs in the ninth U7-7 deadlock anil beat the

•d'break a

powerfulLfchigh A. A. of IVrtb Anibny al theCity Stadium in Amboy Wednesdaynignt. Tho game was played underfloodlight* and the final store wa.s10 to 7. Tho CaiUret victory snap-ped a seven-game Lehigh winningstreak.

Ernie Sabo singled to open theninth. He went to third on u shorthit to right by Al (King) Stuzku,Herb Sullivan thuu hit to the in-field, scoring Sttbo from third. Jt^ssent a long fly to center, bringm.

2 in Stutzke. Yap'a single scored Cur0 ley Sullivan with the third run.

Carteret .scored in the first inn-ing when Ernie Sabo, who, incidentally had played a bulimia lielding

SG(6)

ABVan Cleaf, 2b ..._ 6Kirkpatrick, 3b 2,Pernne, 2b 2V. Timberman, c. 4Hayes, cf 4Dey, 68 4A. Ttofcerman, lb 3Uwwiti, If 3Petty, p 8Tlmko, rf 4

R

X011011001

game at third, hit a hoiiiu run withMickey D'zurilla aboard. Jess* Sulli-

g | van also hit u hurner later in tlugame.

AH this does not overshadow thesuperb pitching job turned in by

J young Stanley Kosel who held theojLehighs U> eleven scattered hits. He11 struck out four batters and gaven only one ibasp on balls.J C*rt«r«t A. A. (10)

0 Ititroka, sa 4l ' M . D'auHHa, If 2

Babo, 8b + 6

"Pete Says"BOYS — BUY YOUR CLOTH-

ES TODAY — TAKE MY WORDFOR IT — PRICES ARE GOINGUP DAILY.

THF DEPRESSION IS BREAK-ING AND YOU'LL NEVER BUYCLOTHES AGAIN AT PRESENTDAY PRICES

I'VE ALWAYS TOLD YOUTHE TRUTH IN THE PAST —BELIEVE ME NOW.

BUY TODAY!CLEARANCE SPECIALS

ON SUMMER CLOTHES

84 e

CARTERET TENNIS TOURNAMENTENTRANCE BLANK

Stutske. cH. .Sullivan, lb, rfJ. Sullivan, cfComba, lbKara, rf T...Yai), Zb .Migtaz, 2b ...Kotse), p < „...

5b6

, 1

226

K132Si1100000

II0222Si•i01100

NAME -~

ADORESS _ ~ —

AGE SINGLES u ^(ua« cljftck)

Entry deadline July 15

Addr«» Entrtw ffr Sporti Wttw,

JLJof paitner)

(7)40 10 11

Burke, ab 'r--- #.A.B

6

lUeoas, c , ... 6Nalnkk, If ,.,...,J ,... 4Brooks, lb 4Saltiae, p ...i... 4

40

00

Reg. *I2.BO s u n s -

Reg. $17.50 SUITS

R»g. $27.50 SUITS)-

NOW $ 8.S0

NOW 115.00

NOW $20.00

AU, HAND TA11.OKK1I SILK

UNKD AND Al.L-WOOL

— fSPORT PANTS

Reg. $1.95 NOW $1.35

GREY SPORT PANTS

$2.98 NOW $195

H1aro21I11

U

' WHITE DUCK PANTS

Reg. 98c NOW 75c

FREE — Suit* R«P*ir<wlP r t ^ v l i^ pur pbop if U»«of t lu G*rmaot.

Pete's Clothes Shop309 Smith St., Perth Amboy

Page 6: Thi «v«rywhtre—Pay no mow KdsMcslnside CARTERE Carter ... · SBm Jim and Kelly ^e ^rice °* Thi ^P*s 1 is & centfl «v«rywhtre—Pay no mow KdsMcslnside CARTERECarter* BwMrfi

?AGE SIX FRIDAY, JUI,V_l4, 1933CARTERET

What to Serve .for appetizing meals— you will find a big assortmentof Foods and Homo Needs in your Nearby ASCO Store—(it very reasonable prices.

Shop Where Quality Counts and YourMoney Go«a Furthest

10r New Pack—1933 (Vop f a ^

Peas oSweet, lender, quality p*n«—«t n real Saving.

5c ASCO Beans with Pork21c Rich Whole Milk Cheese10c Wet Pack Shrimp

6 cans 25clb 19c

3 cans 25c

Wesson Oil

Potted Moats can 15c, 10cASCO Mustard pt jar 10cIce Cream Salt pkg 15cBeechnut Gum 3 pkga 10c

Imp. Olive Oil pt can 19cDill Pickles qt jar 15cHeine ^wpet Pi<-klps bnt; life

Pineapple Juice 2 bots 2F>e

17c ASCO Calif. Bartlett

PearsLuscious halves in rich syrup.

Mason Jars pts doz 75cMason Jars qts doz 85cJar Rings pkg 5cJelly Glasses doz 39c

Glass Top Jars pts dz 95cGlass Top Jars qts dz 1.15Parowax lb pkg 9cCerto bot 29c

9c Puritan Mar»hmallows 2 pkgs 15c17c N. B. C. Priscilla Butter Cookies pkg 15c31c N. B. C. Cookie Nut Sticks lb 29cThin Butter Pretzel. lb 20cKraft Swiss Cheese V2-lb pkg 18cKraft American or Pimento Cheese Vfc-Ib pkff 16c

ASCO Griipe Juice « 10c: £ 19cA.SCO Orange Pekoe or

India Ceylon Tea * " pkg

Swnnsdown Cake Flour [ik); 23cVanilla Kxtract bot 17cASCO Corn Starch pkg 5cWaxed Paper pkg 5c

P. & G. Naphtha Soap

LaFrance Powder pkg 9cSatina pkg 5cClorox pt 15c, qt 27cAmerican Tissue 3 rla 14c

6 cakes 19c

BUY NOW AND SAVEGold Seal Macaroni

pkg. 6cGold Seal Spaghetti

pkg. 6c

Gold Seal Noodles3 pkgs 20c

N. B. C. Ginger Snapslb. 11 Vac

Mueller's Macaroni, Spa-ghetti or Noodles pkg 10c

Phillips Spaghetti4 cans 25c

Sunshine Rippled Wheatpkg 10c

Presto Flour, sm. pkg. 12clge. 23c

Bisquick Flour pkg 29c

Quaker Crackels pkg 9c

Delicious Fresh Fruits and Vegetables . . .

GeorgiaFreestonePEACHES3 lbs. 25c

Sound SlicingTOMATOES

2 lbs. 19c

Sweet SugarCORN

3 ears 10c

CaliforniaValencia

ORANGESdoz. 25c

Sweet JuicyPlums

doz. 12c

Crisp IcebergLETTUCEhead 10c

It Pays to Shop Where Quality Counts andYour Money Goes Furthest.

THE FORD V-8 TUDOR

is a Splendid Low-Priced

FamilyCar

it. O. B. Dtfil. fba

THE new Tudor Sedan is the car for die family. It conslitde to buy, is economical, to operata upA has ererydesirable feature of style and beauty; Available eitherwith standard or de luxe equipment The wide doorand sliding front seat make entrance easy. The cathas 112-inch wheelbase and the new Ford V-type,eight-cylinder, 75-horsepower engine with a velvetysmooth performance which makes driving a joyj

TUB DE LUXE TUDOR SEDAN, with safety glassthroughout, cowl lamps, two matched tone horns andoiher •pedal appointments, is $530, f, o. b. Detroit;

DORSEYMOTORS,^347 Maple St., PERTH AMBOY

777 St. Goorge Av«., RAHWAY

I Vbu \M\NT tiooD lErra-tyOft. J.M. WBAM

TEETH MUST NOT BE NEGLECTED

WWU Hoes* Ctmttaftmet «oChild HsaJth in tt» rtport, an-

n d that more than M w r n o tat A.m«rtean chudmn snitwt withoWal dflfecta. Naturally am won-]d m why, with ail thta infomwtfciueaoaaroing UM |wtwiU«m •»< em»-trol <rf denUI dlinfiiw Wng pr»-

thin penwnUre m»»rn» m>\

thin rondition Hue to Ignor-ance, indifTerenm or luck of fnndsTArt pnrrnt» iin»w»n> th*t g+rh>rKM' chiMrwi propeT food* racfa • •Bulk, fruit* and vegetable! protectstMthT Do thtij rwJtw that tmitjand regular (fontal (•*«• w)U avoMmanr nVntal «bnonna]rttMT Doth*7 know them thi«**T Ara theyur«*mviiK-*d of 1*» important <rfteeth? Or >rwilfrer*nt?

Perhaps dietary habits, forn»*dbefor* th*w fmcin h*d Nwm proTed,mn dif!W*nlt to o w w w .

Of ooor**, UM question of «<o-nomia *ntan into thl* nobjeet.M*ny pararU f**l Ui«t Uttij cannotalford to brrj the nromtwry food*or to pnrHd* dental treatment.Whert fanlUm an aetnaUy tndi-r»nt and puwttj utrtcteii tJ» eom-monkT iihoaU st«p in — children•hoaU not b* allowed to grrrw

nternovrMMd or

bodka, TIM eoragnmirr willAnd thai it will on* modi mart itmaintain tnntrtirtkmj for the ranof iwgfegted erdVtrm U m it wouldt» M p them maJntoin thair healtfaa* thU thna.

Since H is known that many try*-tank dbeaaM can b« traced todental Infection*, teeth miut not btiwgW<ri1 Is aa modi «• nun

than ninaty Mr «ent of ma dilWrtnare ifreetMl by d n U l i\mmm Hdoc* Mam that the (omiminHjahoold atsp in and prov14« dlnkain fanMfmt children, partieulaH}now whan n> many f U t f t

SLATS' DIARYBY ROSS FAROUHAR

A my axeallent nwnpW *>/ tlfWr-wit hi the pobH* h«*lth wiu shownbj tlx Union Oonnty I>nt*l H«ahhSociety In Headline a lrtt«r to all

» Boards of Rdnr»tlon In UnionOoanty, urg-tnf th«m to maintain•ohod dental din Jen m thst thachildren at poor famllira woald notb« deprived (4 dental tmatmmt.

Oartainl; parents who &r» awmr*shoo Id adopt tlw net^mmrj meap y

to protect their children'sheahli aad «nVial acanciH aboolddo wbst titty can for UM atrJUranof their communities. Such eoop-

upj <ir«tlf>n wotrM bring atmot marked

MARRIED PASTORLOSES GIRL, TOO,

WHEN WIFE QUITS

Plan to Divorre Mate and WedHis Blond Sweetheart

Falls Through.

Rnmlnlpn. lown.—Whnt pangs ofcnnncli'iirs mn) tie torturing thethought* of Itev. Sharon 0. Inman,who (li'Rertti) his wife and two childrenIn &(l8souri for the love of Bzla("PaUy") Uoldrldgc. twenty-year-oldblond daughter of an Oklahoma win-Inter, nobod; knows.

"I hnve f)one nothing 1 am ashamedof," Bays the youthful clergyman—butgaunt shadows nniler his bloodshoteyes hint nt sleepless nights, at tron-blous worries.

(•one is hla status »s a clergyman,iii! is Ills role us respected husband

and father nnd gone Is the blondchnrmer for whom he sacrificed every-thing.

Although the former minister sayshe plans to divorce his wife and mar-ry the tilrl whom he brazenly took In-to his home and pitted against herin a lovo duel for his affections, the"other woman," herself now with rela-tives In Texas, announces that she hasglYen up nil claims to hla love—thatshe has no Intention of marrying him.

Wife Gets a Job.His wlfo already has obtained a

teaching position for next year as ameans of supporting herself and heryoungsters.

Evidently ashamed of his sorry roleIn Uie triangle, sad fearful of theresult, Inman failed to appear beforethe OMrks Presbytery on April 25 toanswer charges of Immorality and con-duct unbecoming a minister.

They All Wrote Vers».While the Innmns and Miss Hold-

ridge were living together, they wrotepoetry to each other, "as a means ofmaintaining a friendly atmosphere."The pastor would write a poem to"Patsy" and she would write s re-ply; then he would write one to his*wife, and she In turn would reply.

The Inmans were married In Mar-shall, Mo., in 1920. Not until last falldid a shadow appenr on the horttonof her happiness.

Occupying the seat next to Mrs. I»-man In the Teachers' college at Spring-field was a little blond Oklahoman.Often they compared lecture notes andsoon Reverend Inman became a thirdparty at the discussions. His attitudetoward Miss Holdridge 'hanged rapid-ly from Interest In a fellow studentto passionate Infatuation. Mrs. In-man. having tried every other methodof coiling with the situation, finally,agreed to let her husband's blondsweetheart share their home.

Three Under One Roof.For a munrh the three of them,

along with the pastor's two children,lived beneatb one roof, the womenJoking grimly about poisoning the food—and daily (having to school togeth-er. Mrs. Inman- prayed desperatelyhat the young usurper to her hus-

band's love would be compelled, outof a sense of decency, to put an end:o the unnatural arrangement Herprayers, however, were imaaswered.

InmsD and Miss Holdridge eloped toTexas. She was next heard of at thenocie of an uncle at Sahford, Tex.Home weeks Inter Ininan turned up attils father's home here and announcedthat his ministerial days were over.

California i"oodle DogAdopts Orphaned Rabbit

Rnkersfleld, Cnllf.—A feinnle poodlennd Iipr ndojili-it sun. n '•>• jackrabbit, romp at the home n. ,ra. W. G.Towner of BnliM-slield. She said therabbit, apparently orphaned, wascfinght on I.erdo mesa during * fam-ily luitmnuUlf trip, and vrns at once"adopted" by the poodle.

Policeman Arrests HitBrother, Then Father

Somervllic, N. J.—Patrolman FredSixt, Jr., who had t< arrest his ownbrother on a charge of manslaughterafter the brother's car killed a woman.was faced with ihe duty of arrestinghis father for cureless driving.

The father, Harold Slxt, irmuJalne'tIn court that the summons wus servedwithout Just cnuse, but Itecinier Dur-ham ruled that he must answer to thecharge.

ally

give

Friday—well my report Cnrd w»s-sent so mtitrh to look nt today when

it. home.Hoped

niohhy pa wood-en! '•" fit r*it I(TP^;; I run tinchcr

unlucky itlil<(t'. Pll

g il ii |?l nutsam! then lie l innrift In ma ami "i'il.Well 1 all way*hi'lcnved in I|pr-Hdtiy but since Ihen looking: n).these lien- rrporff'anls I rlumpcHmy mind.

Snti>rd«y -— Anl.Emmy i? wirryedabout her neacewitch roto a let-ter and ped they

was a (Tf)ing to Operate on her littleliny hecuz he had a wrrn on his hod.;ind they had to have it cut off. AntKmmy scd she was n going to tellIfnkel Hen not to make the kid nonrnre bird Houses.

Sunday—-wel I don't no how oldJake Fry is but he must be about atin nil red becuz today when him andpa was playing checkers old Jakehad to stop for a wile, he sed it g'Othis wind hocuz pa plays a little tofust for him I peas.

Munday--well pa made a nuthermistake on the paper today. Mr.Hart witch is the banker went to abankwet up to tha city la$t Satcrdayand pa put a Head Line over thepeace witrh told all about the menwho hunts ili-iTs up in Main pvryfall, & when the Paper cum out itread. Mr. M. L. Hart Attend* Rank-wot of Beer Hunters.

Teusday -Ant Kmmy had n letterfruin HLV cuzzen witch lives in Bos-ton and she is wirryed about him.she says she (jess he is (foine to be a

l i>r a nite watchman or

Grcateit FutureThe nation that has the schools has

the future.—Bismarck.

ZEROZONEREFRIGERATOR

INSTALLED IN YOUR HOMEWITH

NO DOWN PAYMENT$97.50 And Up

AMERICAN RADIO SALESft SERVICE

|735 Smith St. PERTH AMBOYP. A. -1-1212

Kadio Repairs By Factory TrainedExperts

sum thing hrcuzz he told her he hadjirst bounrten a nite Club.

Wensday—Pa is all ways hailingthings lrp. H« wanted to send nbirthday card to Unkel Clarence to-day and he rote ft curd to the for-man witch wirka down on the noose|>a|MT lircur ho won to hnve n op-erashnn today. Own to find out hesent, one to the fnrman * it red likethis. Mcnny happy Relirns of the

,|fty. I bet h» wont spttk to Pa) w) lnnhe ffetn well, if he dom.

Thirsday—Lem Hix diddeni „ ,nuthinp frum the well Ftiir corniuto<lay bpcuz they wrasaent, no p,,, hhis otto and it was to hot to wait'clear in to town he sed.

— Please mention this pap«r whfln

buying from advertisers. -_

SOFT COAL SPECIALSold For Storage Charges

BOUGHT AT PUBLIC AUC-

TION FROM THE READING

R.R.AT PORT READING, NJ.

12 CAR LOADSBEST GRADE Bituminous (Soft) Coal

We must sell all coal to empty cars within

3 weeks. For sale at following Low Prices.

MINE RUN ALL FINE

SCREENED ALLLUMP

ton

ton $5.Above Prices for full lioad Lots—4 to S tons each.

TERMS: Cash to Drijrer.

PORT READING COAL CO.PORT READING, N. J.

Woodbridge 8-0728Rahway 7-2565

I PICKED PLYMOUTH BECAUSE ITS A

A CERTIFIED INTERVIEW WITH MR. GEORGE R. STEVENS, 1006 SPRING STREET, ELGIN, ILL

"It's a piece of real

Precision E ngi neering "

. . says this Watchmaker

PEOPLE like Mr. Stevens under-stand why Plymouth carries

"details" so far. Four rings perpiston instead of three. Four crank-shaft bearings. Full pressure lubri-

' cation—not hit-or-misj splash.

Those things are goad engineer-ing. Of course they're details—whenyou compare them in importancewith Floating Power enginemountings — hydraulic brakes —safety-steel bodies.

But details count—and we'd likeyou to see how much. "Look at allthree"... and see for yourself whyPlymouth is growing so fast.Standard4-dooriedui 1510)2 doorutlao 146;bit seal coupe $483: busintii coupe 1441. "2-door scd>a H25; 4-door jed«n Uli: COL..„..„..coupe S995; rumble se^t coupe $}4^i bujiacss coupe$499- Price* subject tu cbaage without aotice.SH nm«JIK it tin Curt* MMI liyat Ctaw M n l* h»m

"Once you try Hydrsulk Bttkmyou'll neicr UM urthiaf <iM.**

A

. LVLu

**Mn. .Sieven3 i i AS p r u u d o l P l y m o u t h t s of h e r s m i r t o t d r « i —a n d a ioi m e , I ' m n e v e r o u c I U oc^Jec t * fiuc p i e t e u( n h i

NEW PLYMOUTH SIXWITH PATENTED

FLOATING POWER

"Nowljay,'llnmilikelwatcbl'TWipr*ht... comios iron • wudunikar."

$445

WAGNER MARKET COItalian and Lorsican

Vendetta U RenewedBSEUU, Corsica.—A "veudetttt" be-

tweeu Italian and Ooralran flslieruieuhas broken out on the coastB of Cor-sica and It Is feared tluit serious troo- 'ble may develop If Immediate stepsare not taken by both the French andItalian governments to settle the con-flict,

Vor many mouths flghernien ID Cor-sica have been complaining thai Ital-lsn trawlers, coming from Leghornor Sardinia, are flailing clauflestlneljIn Comical) territorial waters, aud sev-eral times Italian fishing boats werecaptured by the customs policeagents. This has developed a strongantl-Itallan feeling In flstilug villages•nd It has now readied a clluiu fol-lowing a recoct Incident near Basttewhen a huge Italian trawler, sailingwitB all Ughta oot. wbl«b Is coDtraryto sU OSTSJ raenlatlons ID th« middleof the ulgbt, attempted to sink two•mall flshlng boats about a mile offP(«tra Carbara at Uape (Torue

The Oorslcan Beliermtin barely es-capBd being crushed, despite their sig-nals, and ttMj liid to i w tlu spoalaJrifles which the* always carry wltnthem In case of bulug attacked byporpoises which Ipfest tha courts ofCorsica. After a few »olleys, w e nfind the trawler disappeared. .

QUALITY PRICES FOR THURSDAY, FRIDAY 6- SATURDAY

SELECTEDROASTINGCHICKENS

ib I Dc

SIRLOIN or ROUND

STEAKS

VERY BESTECONOMY

pound 39DEUCIOUS FRESH

CHOPPEDBEEF pound 15

BEST BONELESSCHUCK POTROAST

c19PLATE OR NAVEL

CORNED ^ mtBEEF p°und f

aSELECTED SMOKED

BEEF OKTONGUES f—d mW

PORTERHOUSE

STEAKib. 29c

100 MAIN STREET, W00DBR1DGE572 ROOSEVELT ,

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v • • » • • • • • » • ' - ^

FRIDAY, JULY 14, 1933

Th«Wort<10oiorPrtl,Co..ftt.t«iiB1llb,

OLb<SOO0-ft-rB. HE 5 * ^ THftT HP M t) TO 1 L<VU»Ueb fcOOC) A

»«OIt<lE 4OOC) AMD M«t>,AS <^4«T AS TMBY

%~^r

Tin - T«E KELLY KIDS TOM

ANp WHEN YA irr THAT

HONtiT'NOFOOLINAHO THE WATE1? ISCLEAR LIKE WS7AL

TMr» OLD MUDHOLE '3 BIN ANF(E$ORE LOHfi

'NUFF

! THE MANS(iO»(C IH&kOC.MEBBf » * KIM

LIFT ITPlUTFi

OMfWlC «HATWE COULD DO* I1H TWIT BUS

MIRROR

YuT TUt1 t>ON'f KID YER OLD POP'I'LL BET THERE'S SOME KETCH IN TH13HEY OFFICER. WANNA SEE A

?Cft(«D FKOM A CIRCU3! I U FOLLEB HIMAN^EC WHAT HEi UP TO. AH^CAPTUttM

EDT

TOKE MIH 0NTHEST0ONTlETHIH-6ITAW«rtfU6irAROPE' AND CAPTURE HIM AliVE ANWE'LL SEU WM TO THE MUSEUM!

VTWASNT KIH>IK COLLY! so Tis!AND HE'S AN

BRUTEJOO!!

HEY FVJHOPPIN'BKS MONKEY?

RULER MEJJ

WHAT-UMFIMTERIT5QOI, DEPTHS AND

THERE'HEfelOtDNT»TtaYA!THAT MONKEYM NORTH

»s ,<V MEHA6ERIEset NOW

|CUAK«»I

L M A N N & SONOPTOMETRISTS

i SUCHIS LIFE t>

Daily, 10 to 12, 2 to 6 and 7 to 8Wedneuday, 10 to 12 only

89 Si^ith Street T«i. 4-2007PERTH AMBOY, N. J.

Page 8: Thi «v«rywhtre—Pay no mow KdsMcslnside CARTERE Carter ... · SBm Jim and Kelly ^e ^rice °* Thi ^P*s 1 is & centfl «v«rywhtre—Pay no mow KdsMcslnside CARTERECarter* BwMrfi

fAGB BIGHT

co«iulni nonT»«»r»Rtlon Indiana *hn hn»» artovtixith* cnntomn of cWllbwi llf*. T V ***•WTationji «r« terrllnrlM (wt «i>nrt fliI»i)m«i fin Ihc Inrtinn rhnrgc* of <h«nation, where thejr nn> pri»t«-teil «n<1taught. Thow <m the roswTiittnna nrc•Ot pi*rmtt!p<l In pn«« the liminilarle*#f thfl rMiorvc '«iirrpiit in iir(>i>er hnslnewi or h j ennsonl nf DIP aii^nt In

diRrre. As rnpli l lj u s pnRSlMf I he In

d l m n nre tndiirwl to nhnri'lnn tritifil

re lat ion* and ndopl t lw hnlillii "f 'I'"

whi te rare

— Plonsp m e n t i o n t h i i \v\\ii'r to mlvertLoer?; il h H i f you. it lirlp- tln-tn.it h e l p s y o u r pap<T.

TODAY

THE FRANK,MAN-TO-MANSTORY OF A MAN-TO-MAN GIRl

B A R B A R A

STANWYCKla

"Baby FaceGEORGE BRENX

VAUDEVILLE

KITTY DONER & CO.

HICKEY BROS

BALABANOW 5

7 TROJANS

JOE BILLING

RITZ Ktli Episode

"Three

Musketeurs"

Gene Hoenigsberg AtTimes Square Store

Popular Former Manager I»

Back At Old Job In Perth

Am boy EttablitKment.

One Hnenip^M'iTc is hark a( theTimes S(|u«tr Storr in Perth Amboy,loratcil at Smith »<nl SUU> strwt.(irnc is well known to hundreds ofmntnrists in W<>ndhncHr<* anil Carterit ss former manjiRvr of the ston1

when it was located at 204 Smithptrret.

During tht> (hroe yo«ra Mr. Hnen-ip<'tn'r(f hn.t hef-n awa5* from this ter-ritory he has worked in many of thestorrA •-ompristnif Hit- (itf*t Timf™Square chain. Itait he is (flad t<» bo

1 bark, and HAS been busy nince his r<>! turn greeting old customers andI making many new ones.

(li-m-'s many years in the auto«tj|>ply business has jfiven him in-vnlunltli; knowledge anil experienceI'uMi'i'iniiiK lln- nrcdii of mi>t»ri»ts,

, which many of his customers hav«ctniif to rely nn in purrhasintf mer-i-haiKliHu iti this I in*.

l*)nriii|r 9n Interview with a rt'pre-scntntivc of this paper Mr. Hoemgs-bfix nske<l thaU we extend an invita-tion to his many friends in this sec-tion to drop into the store, at theirconvenience, and re-new old ac-quaintance.

—Please mention thia papw wh«nbuying from advertisers.—

KLUBKAUTASuper Highway No. 25 Avenel, N. J-

DINING .nd DANCINGSpecial Muiic Saturday Night*

Furnithed by Six Piece Orchestra

Beat Philadelphia Be«r on P l

NO COVER CHARGE

Don't Say We Didn't

WARN YOU!Coal prices are continuallyadvancing so don't set backand wait as you'll pay con-siderably higher prices foryour winter coal supply.

Buying Your Winter CoalNow Means Saving 10% to 12%

We Are Still Quoting SpringPrices On Grade "A" Coal

P E A C O A L <E*tra Large) $ & 5 0 per ton

BUCKWHEAT COAL NO. i) $ 7 . 5 0 " "CHESTNUT COAL <*** ****) $ 1 0 . 7 5 " "S T O V E C O A L $ 1 0 . 7 5 " "C.O.D.ONLY

THESE PRICES SUBJECT TOCHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE UN-LESS YOUR ORDER IS PLACED

MAIL OR PHONE YOUR ORDER TODAY FOR PRO-

TECT1ON ON THESE PRICES

RARITAN COAL andCHARCOAL CO.

.JHK Phone: P. A. 4-2015

ANOTHER

CURLEY SPEED CLASSICAT THE

WOODBRIDCE SPEEDWAYSUNDAY, JULY 16

AT2;30P, M.CHAMPIONSHIP DRIVERS

FRAME H^LON RUSSO

AND 40 OTHER SPEED KINGS

6 Events-AAA SanctionedAHMIRSION GRANDSTAND $1.10

, JULY 14, 1983OAHTEHBT PEERS

Food Market Advice

By ANN PACE

AT THIS SOMnn thp chntrr- nf fond*which «r« plentiful unii ro»*on-

nbln is wide wh^thrr it. hf fr<-»h fnilt.i,\egfUhlcs. n»h. nvitn. or poultry

Among; tho frenh fruits whlrh w *plentiful or rapidly boromin(t *n A*"*1

ITI *> I o n 9 . wntrrmHmi. runtHlnup**.hitn^yhall, and honeydcur The o»n-tulnupf nt" pvpn bMl»*r flftvnrAd lh»nthoy hftvr been rerpritly. Not (T«y(inr biUon in fliimm^r hut with TIPWapplr.n, itc.T'h^fl, nour rh^rrioft, nndhurkt^tifTrics (or blnpbrrriffl) waitinR In b" p<ip!«-<l tmtween two llaky'"r\iit.?, pie p f*mfi to h*» intiirftted. Orfor rn» fruits, frnll Hnlml« unil rruitriipn ther^ ~.rr orHtiK^s, bannniis andn*«>M rhorricii tMum-i drr rnfrt>«htn(fplthir raw or poarh^fl (ronU »d jfontly)in ntrup. Umf>nB iro rtlwnvR with u«lor b vprRCPR. uni. tn l*»n'l that tartflftvnr whlrh given jest tn numerousdishm.

What • little lemon )ulr<? e»n floTrhi-n roinblnHl with olive otl nod Haltto milking ft vegptablo salad, or a flah,m^at or poultry salad for that mat-tfr really savory, Is remarkable. Anunusually attractive nnlsd of iK-asonable Tegetablpi! rprently served In-cluded green peas, limn beans andSTeen beaiui, all rooked to retain theirKreennea.i, with Just enough celery toH(ir% a bit nf rriBpne«i unit possiblya piunlng acqualntanre with a bit ofonioa or frarlic. This nf rourse wasthoroajKhly chilled In the Frenchdressing before It wax put oti Ita bedof lettuce and the salnd dressing add-ed. For a hvarU of lettucA »alad the(Junker Maid Kitchen sufrgeBta a pen-nut butter salad dressing. To pre-

pare it, gradually beat three-quarteriof a cup ol French <ln>«ilnR made,with either lemon Juice nr vinegarInto one-quarter of a riip of peam tbutter This dresslnR i« »lso deliciou*on a banana snlnrt In additinn togreen peai anil benns the vp#etablestand" ahow that rabhnj(es, enrrots,been, and onlonn are all plentiful.Olery ba« com* in fmfnViently to ac-company hard-<-ookr(! PRKS. frenh-conked or canned flsh ami shell fishand cooked t >eats Intn salad mixtures.All of these fit nic-ly intn scooped Outripe tomatoea which are abundant.

Filleted flsh are dvnilable In mostmarkets and they p«n be cooked Innr ny interesting wnys, none nf themelaborate or trnut.l»5i.me. PoachingIn well-seasoned milk. In n Creole orSpanish sauce or baking on a bed ofchopped spinach are just three wayato cnok them Many varieties nf fnuhor salt water fish nre filleted includ-ing bin* pike. liR<lili>rk, cod, flimnder,and aole.

The ready rooked ments and sau-sages make summer limrheft and din-nern easy tn prepare and they are alsoeeonqtnic.al.

Prepared spanhettl with frankfur-ters or bacon makes an inexpensiveand quickly gotten luncheon or aup-per dlfh

When an nerasional crwil day ar-rives Is the time to roaat beef, lamb,veal or pork, or to hnil and bake ham.All of these are In market and reason-able In cost. Broiling and fryingchickens are plentiful and reasonableand the fryers are large and plumpenough to roaat. Fowl. a» usual, areavailable to serve as fricassee or pie.Jellied or pressed chicken or for saladMid Jellied broth.

her desire for wealth and lumry, nheRiven a performance that is said • "be as amazing? as it is darinfr. Sel-dom h*ft there been in a role por-trayed on the screen, a rhore delib-erate, » more cold hlnodod, n mor"enrxaneinjr siren than thin (drl wholead* men on until they have servedher purpose. Never such a person-age, who flits from one love to another an a bee from flower to flower,breaking all with whom she cornea incontact.

At Rife, ElizabethKitty Doner, musical comedy fav-

orite and her company, headline th«five act vaudeville program startingat lh< Riti Thcatr", mooy fur H fourlay onpajfement. Miss Doner offerssonjrs as you like them in her owninimitable way.

Hickey Brothers, "Two ElefrantGentlemen", play their well knownstyle of comedy which has mad?them famous in vaudeville for anumber of years.

Balabanow Five, offer theiri very

pleasing accordion HCL"Baby Face-" •• Pictur*

Barbara Stanwyck's alluring beau-ty has been (jiven full sway in herlatest Warner Bros, picture, "BabyFace'", which opens at the Ritz Thea-tre today for four days.

It in a new anil resplendent Bar-bara both infthe lure of her enticingfemininity and Mm splendor of herflimsy and decolpttp |?owna. Shethrows herself into her role of afascinating but ruthless temptre33with such abandon that her powerto ensnare seems almost hypnoti?.

As the baby faced vamp who setsout deliberately to ensnare men in

Early MatchesA century URO, the original phn»-

pfaonui matched were sold In boxen of60 ni a trifle over one cent ft match.

RADIO COMPANY MOVES

The American R*di« Satw »n<jService Co:, formerly located at /.MMMadison avenue, Perth Amboy, re-cently moved into their new, modernhome at 73 Smith street, In thlfj newshop they are more completelyequipped to attend the needs of theirhundreds of satisfied customer*.

Capital Abandon**! OvernightAngkhor, French Indo-Chlna, had

3,000,000 Inhabitant! "00 years agoand wni th« capital of the Orient ItWEI mysteriously nhnndoned overnightby orderi of the Kmer emperor.

Shaw UiScentless garlic hns been devo1»ped

by a San Francisco mnn. •

ATTENTION CUSTOMERS!WE ARE 'NOW LOCATED IN

OUR NEW MODERN HOME

Highwt Quality Work

Low«rt Pric«aBoJr Wotfc - Ulterin.

RELIABLE AUTOREFINISHINC CO402 New Brnru. Ave

PERTH AMBOY

HIRAM'S PARADISEHIGHWAY 25, AVENEL

THAT BEAUTIFUL BALL ROOMOrehottm Every Saturday NHe

THE

GORDON-BENNETTHOTEL

LARGEST OCEAN FRONT HOTELIN

WILDWOOD BY-THE-SEA, N. J.AN OUTSTANDING VACATION VALUE - - - DIRECTLY FACINGTHE OCEAN - - - ALL OUTSIDE ROOMS WITH PRIVATE BATHSAND RUNNING WATER - - - ELEVATOR TO STREET - - - SUPER-IOR CUISINE - - - BATHING PRIVILEGES.

Rates Start at ^ ' ^ Per Person Daily

INCLUDING ALL MEAL^

Weekly Rates $17.50 Up (two in a room)FREE AUTO PARKING

WM. S. WOODS, Manager

1

COFFEE SALEYou'll find one of these three famous blends exactly suited to your coffee

taste . . . at the price you want to pay. Take advantage of this sale today.

• H O W IO MAKE OOODICED COFFEE. Make coffeeas usual but use double theamount. Fill gliss« % fullof cracked ice and pour cof-fee in while hot. Add creamand sugar to taste.

Eight O'clock who U« Cojfee i l ifrt For rlimtI and MdJw.

BnU'lim Coffa at io^ F *

Bokar Tf" Fiwa Colomliuin Co(f«, bimttd viih choice

BratiUan . . . Far ihoM who lilcf iKctr Cojfce Slronj.

ijf« Malntm-Sawif. lb. J . 7

lb.tin23C

iL* yPtail FOODSThese nationally popular foods offer you top'notch qualitfat prices that make your grocery dollars go farther. They areQuaker Maid Foods . . high in value . high in quality.

SALAD DRESSING

GRANDMOTHER'S

BREADVi pi. jar

ANN PACE

Preserves ASSORTED

ANN PAGt

pint |ar

16 oi- •Hi

15' quart |ar 29'Peanut Butter \Z9* '1.°L17C

Listed tielo* is a complete assortment of Grandmother'*standard 20 ai. loaves of bread that sell for &(. Each of ourvarieties represent an outstanding value and are made of thefinest ingredients. Consistent with our policy, we will main'

tain these attractive retails as long as possible.

SULTANA

Grape Jelly *£• 1CK V 15 I Peanut Butter

Quaker Maid Beam ™£riJ? . 3 L1 ,

ecial UaL

MayfairTea

aluti in outi

Nothing fnoK refroSlng thcte hot summer diyi thin • loni glut ofked ta . . etpeclally whtn made with one of thcte uipcib Ucndl.

Olinte-Fckoc India.Crrloa-liVK Mllcd, Fomou.~>olonf.RKothucd quilpnr-LirgcMKlUQf bread b US.

O«Mc-Pck«* Indli-CcflonEiquUitt quality. UfWICcllcd In larot, bcJ>. botiqiM

India C«rlon),rt •A §ood tta M »II ucuHtullf low eri«t.Our Own Tea .**<*-**..

*(%Le>CAMPBELL'S TOMATO SOUP .GULDEN'S MUSTARD . . .WHEATIES WHOLE WHEAT FLAKES

O V A L T 1 N E THE SWISS CHOCOLATE FOOD DRINK "tt

HEINZ KETCHUP . . . tSCOLLEGE I N N TOMATO JUICE COOCTAU. . fe 19c

UNEEDA BAKERSIOHN ALDENMOLASSEScooms 2*+ 29«

M U F F E T S A NEW IMPROVED WHOLE WHEAT BISCUIT i * , . ^

CHIVERS'MARMALADE . . . ,feH,21cO A K 1 T E CLEANS M1LUON THINOS , 2 |*p.l9C

KEN'L-RATION THE LXXJ FOOD SUPREME • • . 3 ««. 25«

BORDEN'S CHEESE AMERICAN AND CHATEAU 2 { £ 27c

White BreadMade of the finest flours anJ other ingredient*, by

our master bakers.

Raisin BreadKkUlifes lovt this fine, tasty bread chock-full of

plump raUina.

Rye Bread •This crispy, hearth-bakctl loaf li grc^t with hctt,

a\\Kic or cold cues.

Sliced WheatAchokcbtendof wholewheat and white flotiriwith

Bran . . httc's htalih plui tavtct

Whole WheatYou »« ill tht health properties of ihc when in 1I1U

wholewmc 100% Whyle Wht.t Loif.

Wheat RaisinDeveloped by our owi\ laker* cumbinn thebenefit* ot whole whe^t, wlutt flour ind raULn*.

STANDARD

20 OUNCE

LOAF

STANDARD

20 OUNCE

LOAF

STANDARD

20 OUNCE

LOAF / '

STANDARD

20 OUNCE

LOAF

STANDARD

20 OUNCE

LOAF

STANDARD

20 OUNCE

LOAF

c~>»eclat VaiHct In cJ.uailt1PRICES EPFBCTIVE THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY i

GENUINE SPRING '»

Legs of Lamb , 20°Porterhouse Steak GRADE », 33cFancy Smoked Butts gftSS

i Sliced Boiled Ham^ Fancy Fresh Mackerel

f

B).

OR 1 1 cSPICED HAM J J c

FREE ""affi*" HeaddressWITH THE PURCHASE Of 4 ROLLS OP J \m

SEM1NOLECM5TISSUE 4 83H

J+«ui«e[ tk, qwrkllrig wt

BEES:NEWPOTATOES , .

WATERMEU)N$ u**m

FANCY BEETS or CARROTSSTARK APPLES . 2 fc. 15c

THE QEIAT ATLANTIC

•ot

btnuL, both loc.1 .nd rv.ilon.lly ^v.ittotd. Ortf youi riuuVi' * r i iW r k l l n g ""*•*• c t c ' w < " c ' " ^ Y **»*> •

LU(«J btkw ut • "KRUEOER'S

SPECIAL

ue Ribbon Beer t« 15c

•SchlhzBw . . . b«15c Yukon Club °XT 3O.25cCarlings Red Ctp Ale h£2lc 'Yukon <

'Hoffman KJ 'i^ 10c t ? 20c "Yukon

C*COin»erAfc 2£t.23c White Rock W«i«r '\Slfc^Indicates Plui Dcpotfe

PACIFIC TEA 00 . ;**n»N WVWION

/W

4./ A i tt*ia